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Innate immune signaling in the olfactory epithelium reduces odorant receptor levels: modeling transient smell loss in COVID-19 patients.

Steve RodriguezLuxiang CaoGregory T RickenbacherEric G BenzColin MagdamoLiliana A Ramirez GomezEric HolbrookAlefiya Dhilla AlbersRose GallagherM Brandon WestoverKyle E EvansDaniel TatarShibani MukerjiRoss ZafonteEdward W BoyerC Ron YuMark W Albers
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2020)
Post-infectious anosmias typically follow death of olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) with a months-long recovery phase associated with parosmias. While profound anosmia is the leading symptom associated with COVID-19 infection, many patients regain olfactory function within days to weeks without distortions. Here, we demonstrate that sterile induction of anti-viral type I interferon signaling in the mouse olfactory epithelium is associated with diminished odor discrimination and reduced odor-evoked local field potentials. RNA levels of all class I, class II, and TAAR odorant receptors are markedly reduced in OSNs in a non-cell autonomous manner. We find that people infected with COVID-19 rate odors with lower intensities and have odor discrimination deficits relative to people that tested negative for COVID-19. Taken together, we propose that inflammatory-mediated loss of odorant receptor expression with preserved circuit integrity accounts for the profound anosmia and rapid recovery of olfactory function without parosmias caused by COVID-19.
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