Skip to Content
Advertisement
Neuroscience

Rabies Virus Helps Map Psilocybin’s Brain Altering Effects

The deadly pathogen is adept at jumping between neurons, making it an ideal tracer to reveal how connections change after a dose of psilocybin in mice

Colorful mushrooms glow under vibrant red and blue lighting in a dark, forest-like scene. Credit: Saska RF / Shutterstock.

Psychedelic mushrooms have attracted quite a bit of interest from researchers lately. Recent research has hinted both at the effectiveness of psilocybin, the psychoactive compound in psychedelic mushrooms, in treating clinical depression and at the ways that the hallucinogenic compound works to temporarily remodel the human brain.

Featured Video

But exactly how psilocybin wields its mind-altering magic on a neural level remains mysterious. Now, researchers have co-opted defanged rabies viruses to help map the changes that the psychedelic molecule makes in mouse brains.

They suggest that psilocybin works by weakening feedback loops that typically fuel negative thinking in a brain’s outer layer and by increasing the connectivity of brain circuits that translate sensory perception into action. The international team of scientists from China, Hong Kong, and the United States recently published their findings in Cell.

Read more: “What Is Your Brain Doing on Psychedelics?

Advertisement

Psilocybin administered to mice seemed to affect much of the rodents’ brains. “This is really looking at brain-wide changes,” said Cornell University biomedical engineer and co-author Alex Kwan, in a statement. “That’s a scale that we have not worked at before. A lot of times, we’re focusing on a small part of the neural circuit.”

Kwan and his colleagues constructed that brain wide map by hooking psilocybin to two viruses, one of which was a rabies virus that had been genetically engineered to only infect and spread to designated neurons in the mouses’ brains. Capitalizing on the rabies virus’s ability to jump across neuronal synapses—part of why the pathogen is so deadly in nature—the team could trace the march of psilocybin across the brain as it led to neuronal changes that introduced more synapses into the organ.

The authors admit that such rabies tracing does have limitations. The virus could spread to neighboring neurons using a non-synaptic route, they wrote, and of course a mouse brain is very different from that of a human.

But the findings do offer tantalizing clues, and potentially useful therapeutic insights, into how psilocybin changes brains.

Advertisement

Enjoying  Nautilus? Subscribe to our free newsletter.

Lead image: Saska RF / Shutterstock

Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Neuroscience

Explore Neuroscience

Your Biological Clock is More Complex Than You Think

Prepare for Daylight Saving Time by taking a tour of your internal timekeeping machinery

March 5, 2026

The Urge to Snack Is Built Into Our Brains

“It’s a recipe for overeating”

March 3, 2026

Early Exposure to Junk Food Has Brain-Altering Effects

That first hit of burger and fries can leave quite the impression

February 27, 2026

The Brain Science Behind the Munchies

New cannabis research shows why we get snacky when we get high

February 23, 2026

New Theory of Learning Upends the Lessons of Pavlov’s Dog

Maybe we don’t need so many reminders to remember something after all

February 20, 2026

A Peek Inside the Minds of Honeybees

New research reveals the neurochemical cocktail brewing in bee brains when they learn

February 12, 2026