Humoral immunity and antibody neutralization play a primary role in controlling emerging human picornaviruses, including enterovirus 71 and 68, linked to severe neurological diseases.
Picornaviruses are the most commonly encountered infectious agents in mankind. They typically cause mild infections of the gastrointestinal or respiratory tract, but sometimes also invade the central nervous system. There, they can cause severe diseases with long-term sequelae and even be lethal. The most infamous picornavirus is poliovirus, for which significant epidemics of poliomyelitis were reported from the end of the nineteenth century. A successful vaccination campaign has brought poliovirus close to eradication, but neurological diseases caused by other picornaviruses have increasingly been reported since the late 1990s. In this review we focus on enterovirus 71, coxsackievirus A16, enterovirus 68 and human parechovirus 3, which have recently drawn attention because of their links to severe neurological diseases. We discuss the clinical relevance of these viruses and the primary role of humoral immunity in controlling them, and summarize current knowledge on the neutralization of such viruses by antibodies.
Anastasina et al. (Thu,) conducted a review in Neurological diseases caused by human picornaviruses. Antibodies was evaluated. Humoral immunity and antibody neutralization play a primary role in controlling emerging human picornaviruses, including enterovirus 71 and 68, linked to severe neurological diseases.