Transcript for:
Understanding Rabies: History and Biology

In the 1970s, thousands of chicken heads rained from the sky in Europe, making foxes and other wildlife confused and very happy. Why? They were filled with a vaccine to fight the deadliest virus known to humanity.

Since the 1930s, a rabies epidemic had been sweeping across wildlife populations in Europe and humans wanted to finally get rid of the virus once and for all. Rabies is named after Lyssa, the ancient Greek spirit of mad rage, and has been haunting us for at least 4,000 years. It can turn animals into angry beasts and humans into zombies that fear water. But what makes Lyssa fascinating is not just how bizarre and deadly its infection is, but also how incredibly good it is at avoiding our defenses. Viruses exist on the edge between life and death.

Hardly more than a few genetic instructions that need living cells to multiply. The Lysa virus is simple even for a virus. It has only five genes, that is the instructions for five proteins, that let it solve complex problems.

Infect a mammal, avoid its immune system, travel to its brain, make more of itself and infect new hosts. Let's see what happens if you get infected. It all starts with a bite, most likely by a dog carrying millions of viruses in its saliva, pushing them deep into the tissue.

The goal is your nerve cells, your neurons. They are living electrochemical wires transferring signals throughout your body and can stretch for up to one and a half meters, with their cellular machinery on one end and a terminal on the other. The terminal is where cells talk to each other, bypassing chemicals that convey information. Lyssa probably binds to the receptors that are crucial for this process and slips inside the unsuspecting nerve cells.

Inside, the virus has to solve a big problem. It needs to get to the cellular machinery to take over the cell and make more viruses, and because neurons are pretty long, this can be far away. There is a solution at hand, though.

Cells have microtubules spanning their insides that give them structural integrity. But they also provide a track system for a specialized delivery system. Dynion motors are actual motors that use energy and deliver packages.

They're made from 50 different proteins, 10 times more than the virus, and look like a little pair of shoes. Lissa uses one of its five proteins to hijack this amazing system. and order it to head for the nucleus. What's the immune system doing to prevent all of that? Well, unfortunately, not much.

Usually when a virus attacks, your civilian cells are crucial in activating your immune response. They notice that they've been infected and release hundreds of thousands of a special family of proteins. The interferons that, well, interfere with viruses. We'll have to simplify a lot, but in a nutshell, interferons alert your immune system to make antivirus weapons.

But they do much more. They tell civilian cells to turn down their protein factories for a while, which means that viruses can't replicate efficiently anymore. And interferons tell your cells to become super transparent, which is important, because how can your immune cells notice that your civilian cells are infected when viruses hide inside them? Your body solves this by creating display windows into their insides called MHC class 1 molecules. Cells constantly produce stuff to stay alive and to showcase to your immune cells what's going on inside them, they take random samples of their products and put them into these tiny display windows to give a peek inside.

Interferons tell your cells to make way more display windows and become super transparent. If a cell is infected and forced to make virus parts, your immune cells will see these parts in a window and order the infected cell to kill itself and all the viruses trapped within. This is one of the most powerful methods of wiping out a viral infection.

Unfortunately, Lissa blocks your neurons from making interferons and stays basically invisible to your immune system. In contrast to many other viruses, when it replicates, it doesn't kill its host, which would also trigger alarm systems. Instead, it stealthily jumps from neuron to neuron, very slowly making its way to your brain.

This phase can take weeks to months and very rarely even years, and depends on a bunch of things, like if the bite was in your face or foot, or how many viruses got into your muscles. Lyssa is a patient monster, until it reaches its goal, your brainstem. Finally, the immune system catches on that something isn't right and reacts. It dispatches some of your most powerful antivirus cells, killer T-cells, to seek and kill infected cells and wipe out the enemy.

In other viruses, it can also kill infected cells. In viral infections, this would be a turning point, but in rabies, the T cells are rushing towards their doom. Simple Lysa with its five proteins plays a you know reverse card using the immune system's ingenuity against itself your central nervous system is a very fragile part of your body and so the immune system has to be very careful a few haywire immune cells in your brain is a quick way to die so they are free to enter your nervous system they have to be invited in and can be kicked out to protect themselves your nerve cells can order T cells to self-destruct if they think they're overreacting And Lissa figured out a way to make infected neurons express this order.

So as your powerful defense cells arrive, they are ordered to commit suicide. Now the virus infiltrates the brain stem. Once this stage is reached, you are going to die.

How Lissa kills. One of the most irritating things about the Lysa virus is that we still don't know exactly how and why an infected person dies. Our usual idea of viruses causing damage is by multiplying rapidly, killing their host cells once they've made enough copies, triggering, a massive immune reaction that also does a lot of damage.

But this doesn't seem to be what happens here. Brain tissue of rabies patients shows minimal, sometimes non-existent damage. Instead of murdering everything in sight, it's currently throwing away the brain tissue. thought that Lissa wreaks havoc by messing up the neuron communication inside your brain, so much so that it can't function anymore.

This leads to symptoms like confusion, aggression and paralysis. Now the virus begins to leave. Still travelling through neurons, it migrates away from the brain and heads for the salivary glands. This is remarkable because after travelling in one direction, the virus reverses its course.

After decades of study, we don't know how this works. The sphysa ends up saturating your saliva, ready for the irate mammal to bite another and repeat the cycle. While this seems like the beginning of a zombie outbreak, luckily there are no known cases of a human biting another and spreading rabies this way.

Now, the end is near. You are rapidly developing encephalitis, a swelling of the brain with many unpleasant neurological symptoms, from lethargy to paralysis. Slowly at first, and then suddenly, organ after organ fails as you slip into a coma. There is no known effective therapy.

Barely anyone has ever survived Lyssa once symptoms begin to show. It is by far the deadliest virus we know. Except, there is actually something that could save you.

A vaccine. Rabies was one of the first diseases humans developed a vaccine for. As vaccines do, it prepares your immune system for a future attack, so it has the right weapons ready in high numbers.

The horrific tricks of simple Lyssa don't work once you are vaccinated. And the vaccine is special for another reason. Because Lyssa is so slow in the first few weeks, it can be given to you after you've been exposed. So you can still be vaccinated after you've been exposed.

been bitten by an animal. Which is super important if you've had contact with a sick wild animal, say a bat, because you often don't even notice a bite from tiny teeth. Rabies is a monster. One that has followed our species around for thousands of years, that our ancestors were terrified of, and rightly so.

It still kills around 60,000 people each year, almost half of them children. We are far from eradicating this monster. It lurks in the shadows, in forests and animals. Animals of all kinds, ready to return in greater numbers if we ever forget how to keep it at bay, or if we continue the trend of being suspicious of vaccines.

Let's hope that one day, humanity slays this monster, so it can become, like most monsters, part of our imagination.