Selected Grantee Publications
- Clear All
- 2 results found
- nia
- Neurological
- 2022
SARS-CoV-2 Infects Neurons and Induces Neuroinflammation in a Non-Human Primate Model of COVID-19
Beckman et al., Cell Reports. 2022.
https://www.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111573
SARS-CoV-2 causes brain fog and other neurological complications in some patients. It has been unclear whether SARS-CoV-2 infects the brain directly or whether central nervous system sequelae result from systemic inflammatory responses triggered in the periphery. Using a rhesus macaque model, researchers detected SARS-CoV-2 in the olfactory cortex and interconnected regions 7 days after infection, demonstrating that the virus enters the brain through the olfactory nerve. Neuroinflammation and neuronal damage were more severe in elderly monkeys with type 2 diabetes. The researchers found that in aged monkeys, SARS-CoV-2 traveled farther along nerve pathways to regions associated with Alzheimer's disease. Supported by ORIP (P51OD011107) and NIA.
Molecular and Cellular Evolution of the Primate Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex
Ma et al., Science. 2022.
https://www.doi.org/10.1126/science.abo7257
The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) exists only in primates, lies at the center of high-order cognition, and is a locus of pathology underlying many neuropsychiatric diseases. The investigators generated single-nucleus transcriptome data profiling more than 600,000 nuclei from the dlPFC of adult humans, chimpanzees, rhesus macaques, and common marmosets of both sexes. Postmortem human samples were obtained from tissue donors. The investigators’ analyses delineated dlPFC cell-type homology and transcriptomic conservation across species and identified species divergence at the molecular and cellular levels, as well as potential epigenomic mechanisms underlying these differences. Expression patterns of more than 900 genes associated with brain disorders revealed a variety of conserved, divergent, and group-specific patterns. The resulting data resource will help to vertically integrate marmoset and macaque models with human-focused efforts to develop treatments for neuropsychiatric conditions. Supported by ORIP (P51OD011133), NIA, NICHD, NIDA, NIGMS, NHGRI, NIMH, and NINDS.