An airway-to-brain sensory pathway mediates influenza-induced sickness.
Na-Ryum BinSara L PrescottNao HorioYandan WangIsaac M ChiuStephen D LiberlesPublished in: Nature (2023)
Pathogen infection causes a stereotyped state of sickness that involves neuronally orchestrated behavioural and physiological changes 1,2 . On infection, immune cells release a 'storm' of cytokines and other mediators, many of which are detected by neurons 3,4 ; yet, the responding neural circuits and neuro-immune interaction mechanisms that evoke sickness behaviour during naturalistic infections remain unclear. Over-the-counter medications such as aspirin and ibuprofen are widely used to alleviate sickness and act by blocking prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) synthesis 5 . A leading model is that PGE2 crosses the blood-brain barrier and directly engages hypothalamic neurons 2 . Here, using genetic tools that broadly cover a peripheral sensory neuron atlas, we instead identified a small population of PGE2-detecting glossopharyngeal sensory neurons (petrosal GABRA1 neurons) that are essential for influenza-induced sickness behaviour in mice. Ablating petrosal GABRA1 neurons or targeted knockout of PGE2 receptor 3 (EP3) in these neurons eliminates influenza-induced decreases in food intake, water intake and mobility during early-stage infection and improves survival. Genetically guided anatomical mapping revealed that petrosal GABRA1 neurons project to mucosal regions of the nasopharynx with increased expression of cyclooxygenase-2 after infection, and also display a specific axonal targeting pattern in the brainstem. Together, these findings reveal a primary airway-to-brain sensory pathway that detects locally produced prostaglandins and mediates systemic sickness responses to respiratory virus infection.
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