• Dogyote
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    8 months ago

    Questions:

    1. Is the virus infecting and replicating in neurons?

    2. Are the neurons killed by the virus?

    3. Why isn’t the virus infecting all of the neurons?

    4. Why is nearly everyone okay?

    5. Do other, more familiar viruses do this too?

    • perestroikaM
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      8 months ago

      I recall reading about related discoveries elsewhere. The studies were:

      …and it describes a mode of viral spread which does not depend on cell surface receptors, and is used by multiple viruses from different viral genera. The mechanism is forming a cytoplasm tunnel to physically reach the adjascent cell.

      To infect cells on a different host, or elsewhere in the body with a ready-made viral particle, COVID needs the target cell to express the ACE2 receptor… but to infect the direct neighbour of an infected cell with unencapsulated viral RNA, it does not require the target to express ACE2.

      As far as I can reason one o’clock at night:

      • it is infecting and replicating in neurons
      • since patients often lose sense of smell or taste, it definitely kills some neurons
      • since the senses typically recover (although altered), it does not kill all neurons

      As for why most people are OK - I think because neurons are not an environment which COVID has adapted to “work with”. This mode of infection may be slow (the immune system catches up and deploys antibodies). It may be unreliable (cells may stop forming cytoplasm projections when they sense that they are compromised, or other cells may start rejecting such projections) and there may be defenses against it (stress / death signals from one cell may trigger universal antiviral defense mechanisms in adjascent cells).