More and more evidence is coming out that people with COVID-19 are suffering from cognitive effects, such as brain fog and fatigue.
And researchers are
discovering why. The SARS-CoV-2 virus, like many viruses before it, is bad news
for the brain. In a study published Dec.16 in Nature Neuroscience, researchers
found that the spike protein, often depicted as the red arms of the virus, can
cross the blood-brain barrier in mice.
This strongly suggests that
SARS-CoV-2, the cause of COVID-19, can enter the brain.
The spike protein, often
called the S1 protein, dictates which cells the virus can enter. Usually, the
virus does the same thing as its binding protein, said lead author William A.
Banks, a professor of medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine
and a Puget Sound Veterans Affairs Healthcare System physician and researcher.
Banks said binding proteins like S1 usually by themselves cause damage as they
detach from the virus and cause inflammation.
“The S1 protein likely causes
the brain to release cytokines and inflammatory products,” he said.
In science circles, the
intense inflammation caused by the COVID-19 infection is called a cytokine
storm. The immune system, upon seeing the virus and its proteins, overreacts in
its attempt to kill the invading virus. The infected person is left with brain
fog, fatigue and other cognitive issues.
Banks and his team saw this
reaction with the HIV virus and wanted to see if the same was happening with
SARS CoV-2.
Banks said the S1 protein in
SARS-CoV2 and the gp 120 protein in HIV-1 function similarly. They are
glycoproteins — proteins that have a lot of sugars on them, hallmarks of
proteins that bind to other receptors. Both these proteins function as the arms
and hand for their viruses by grabbing onto other receptors. Both cross the
blood-brain barrier and S1, like gp120, is likely toxic to brain tissues.
“It was like déjà vu,” said
Banks, who has done extensive work on HIV-1, gp120, and the blood-brain
barrier.
The Banks’ lab studies the
blood-brain barrier in Alzheimer’s, obesity, diabetes, and HIV. But they put
their work on hold and all 15 people in the lab started their experiments on
the S1 protein in April. They enlisted long-time collaborator Jacob Raber, a
professor in the departments of Behavioral Neuroscience, Neurology, and
Radiation Medicine, and his teams at Oregon Health & Science University.
The study could explain many
of the complications from COVID-19.
“We know that when you have
the COVID infection you have trouble breathing and that’s because there’s
infection in your lung, but an additional explanation is that the virus enters
the respiratory centers of the brain and causes problems there as well,” said
Banks.
Raber said in their
experiments transport of S1 was faster in the olfactory bulb and kidney of
males than females. This observation might relate to the increased
susceptibility of men to more severe COVID-19 outcomes.
As for people taking the
virus lightly, Banks has a message:
“You do not want to mess with
this virus,” he said. “Many of the effects that the COVID virus has could be
accentuated or perpetuated or even caused by virus getting in the brain and
those effects could last for a very long time.”
Source: https://newsroom.uw.edu/news/research-strongly-suggests-covid-19-virus-enters-brain
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41593-020-00771-8
Source: COVID-19
virus enters the brain, research strongly suggests – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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