Early events in rabies virus infection of the central nervous system in skunks (Mephitis mephitis). 1996

K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
Agriculture Canada, Animal Diseases Research Institute, Nepean, Ontario, Canada.

Twenty-four striped skunks were inoculated intramuscularly (long digital extensor muscle of right pelvic limb) with street rabies virus. Groups of two clinically normal skunks were killed at various times after inoculation; skunks that developed rabies were killed in early stages of the clinical signs. Four clinically normal skunks (numbered 1-4) had slight infection in lumbar spinal ganglia, spinal cord and brain. These four skunks were used for detailed immunohistochemical (rabies antigen) studies that included examination of sections from every segment of the spinal cord, most of the spinal ganglia from the 2nd cervical to the 2nd coccygeal (sections at 25-microns intervals of lumbar, sacral and coccygeal ganglia) and brain (sections at 50-micron intervals). In skunks 1-4, there was increasing distribution of antigen-containing neurons that was not correlated with the time elapsed since inoculation. In three skunks (nos. 1, 2 and 3), antigen-containing neurons were predominantly in caudal regions of the spinal cord, caudal right lumbar and sacral spinal ganglia and certain nuclei/regions of the brain (medial reticular formation, right interpositus and lateral vestibular nuclei, left red nucleus, left motor cortex, and left reticular nucleus of the thalamus). Skunk 4 had more extensive infection than skunks 1-3, but the previous pattern was still evident. The results are consistent with viral entrance into the lumbar spinal cord, initial replication mainly at the L2 and L3 levels, local spread in the cord by propriospinal neurons and early transit to the brain via long ascending and descending fiber tracts (bypassing the grey matter of the rostral spinal cord). These mechanisms could provide for early and rapid dissemination in the brain before a significant immune response develops and could induce behavioral changes before the animal is incapacitated by extensive spinal cord infection. Based on the distribution of antigen-containing neurons, the tracts considered most likely to serve as viral transitways from spinal cord to brain include: rubrospinal, corticospinal, spinothalamic, spino-olivary, vestibulospinal and/or spinovestibular, reticulospinal and/or spinoreticular, cerebellospinal and/or spinocerebellar, and dorsal column pathways.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D011818 Rabies Acute VIRAL CNS INFECTION affecting mammals, including humans. It is caused by RABIES VIRUS and usually spread by contamination with virus-laden saliva of bites inflicted by rabid animals. Important animal vectors include the dog, cat, bat, fox, raccoon, skunk, and wolf. Encephalitic Rabies,Furious Rabies,Hydrophobia,Paralytic Rabies,Lyssa,Furious Raby,Lyssas,Rabies, Encephalitic,Rabies, Furious,Raby, Furious
D011820 Rabies virus The type species of LYSSAVIRUS causing rabies in humans and other animals. Transmission is mostly by animal bites through saliva. The virus is neurotropic multiplying in neurons and myotubes of vertebrates. Rabies viruses
D002493 Central Nervous System Diseases Diseases of any component of the brain (including the cerebral hemispheres, diencephalon, brain stem, and cerebellum) or the spinal cord. CNS Disease,Central Nervous System Disease,Central Nervous System Disorder,CNS Diseases,Central Nervous System Disorders
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D012889 Mephitidae The family of omnivorous New World skunks, showing typical warning coloration of patterned black and white and able to eject a malodorous secretion when the animal is startled or in danger. Conepatus,Hog-nosed Skunks,Hooded Skunks,Mephitis,Skunks,Spilogalae,Spotted Skunks,Striped Skunks,Hog nosed Skunks,Hog-nosed Skunk,Hooded Skunk,Skunk,Skunk, Hog-nosed,Skunk, Hooded,Skunk, Spotted,Skunk, Striped,Skunks, Hog-nosed,Skunks, Hooded,Skunks, Spotted,Skunks, Striped,Spotted Skunk,Striped Skunk
D051379 Mice The common name for the genus Mus. Mice, House,Mus,Mus musculus,Mice, Laboratory,Mouse,Mouse, House,Mouse, Laboratory,Mouse, Swiss,Mus domesticus,Mus musculus domesticus,Swiss Mice,House Mice,House Mouse,Laboratory Mice,Laboratory Mouse,Mice, Swiss,Swiss Mouse,domesticus, Mus musculus

Related Publications

K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
December 1981, American journal of veterinary research,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
January 1994, Veterinary pathology,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
September 1981, American journal of veterinary research,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
October 1970, Journal of wildlife diseases,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
April 2017, Transboundary and emerging diseases,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
November 1973, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
January 1980, Journal of wildlife diseases,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
April 2021, Journal of wildlife diseases,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
July 1988, Journal of wildlife diseases,
K M Charlton, and G A Casey, and A I Wandeler, and S Nadin-Davis
July 2002, Journal of wildlife diseases,
Copied contents to your clipboard!