Research explains why virus causing cold sores does not spread to devastating brain infection

Identification of TMEFF1 as an HSV-1 RF expressed in neurons. Credit: Nature (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07670-z

More than half of us are carriers of chronic herpesvirus infections.

But even though the herpesvirus can infect our nerve cells, it rarely causes serious infection of the brain. Researchers from Aarhus University have now discovered a key element of the explanation.

The researchers have discovered a previously unknown defense mechanism in the body that is the reason why herpes infection causes a serious and potentially fatal brain inflammation in only one out of 250,000 cases. The study has recently been published in the journal Nature.

“The study has exciting perspectives because it gives us a better understanding of how the brain defends itself against viral infections,” says Professor Søren Riis Paludan from the Department of Biomedicine at Aarhus University. He is the article’s last author, a Lundbeck Foundation Professor and centre director of the Excellence Centre CiViA.

“We’ve discovered how our body prevents herpesvirus from entering into the brain, even though 50–80% of us are chronically infected with this particular virus. The idea behind CiViA is that we want to understand how the body fights infections without harming itself at the same time. The mechanism we’ve found doesn’t cause inflammatory reactions,” he says.

The answer lies in the protective TMEFF1 gene.

 

 

 

 

By Line Rønn, Aarhus University

Article can be accessed on: MedicalXpress