The study, that used both mouse and human
brain tissue, indicates that
SARS-CoV-2 can affect many other organs in the body, including, in some patients, the central nervous system, where infection is associated with a variety of symptoms ranging from headaches and loss of taste and smell to impaired consciousness, delirium, strokes and cerebral haemorrhage.
"Understanding the full extent of viral invasion is crucial to treating patients, as we begin to try to figure out the long-term consequences of Covid-19, many of which are predicted to involve the central nervous system," said researcher Akiko Iwasaki, a professor at Yale University.
For the study, published on Wednesday in the Journal of Experimental Medicine (JEM), the team analysed the ability of
SARS-CoV-2 to invade human
brain organoids (miniature 3D organs grown in the lab from human stem cells).
The researchers found that the virus was able to infect
neurons in these organoids and use the neuronal cell machinery to replicate. The virus appears to facilitate its replication by boosting the metabolism of infected cells, while neighbouring, uninfected
neurons die as their oxygen supply is reduced.
SARS-CoV-2 enters lung cells by binding to a protein called ACE2, but whether this protein is present on the surface of
brain cells is unclear.
The team determined that the ACE2 protein is, in fact, produced by
neurons and that blocking this protein prevents the virus from human
brain organoids.
SARS-CoV-2 was also able to infect the brains of
mice genetically engineered to produce human ACE2, causing dramatic alterations in the brain's blood vessels that could potentially disrupt the organ's oxygen supply, the team said.
Central nervous system infection was much more lethal in
mice than infections limited to the lungs, they added.
The researchers also analysed the brains of three patients who succumbed to Covid-19.
SARS-CoV-2 was detected in the cortical
neurons of one of these patients, and the infected
brain regions were associated with ischemic infarcts in which decreased blood supply causes localized tissue damage and cell death. Microinfarcts were detected in the
brain autopsy of all three patients.