“…Rats and mice, which share high nucleotide substitution rates, are rodents that constitute part of the subfamily Murinae of the family Muridae (Blanga-Kanfi et al, 2009;Churakov et al, 2010); they are used in more than 40% of neurological studies (Manger et al, 2008;Krubitzer et al, 2011), are the most widely used animal models for research on vaccine development, drug screening and gene function (Douam and Ploss, 2018), and serve as natural vectors or reservoir hosts for the global transmission and expansion of various infectious pathogens, including bacteria (Du and Wang, 2016), viruses (Forbes et al, 2018;Tanveer et al, 2018), and parasites (Movsesyan et al, 2018). A. cantonensis invasion primarily causes negligible or severe eosinophilic meningoencephalitis and meningitis in the CNS of permissive and non-permissive hosts, respectively (Li et al, 2014;Zhang et al, 2017). Although A. cantonensis is the most common infectious cause of eosinophilic meningitis in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Basin (Dunn et al, 2019) and distinct pathological outcomes of rats and mice with A. cantonensis infection have been observed over the past several decades (Courdurier et al, 1964;Wallace and Rosen, 1969;Uchida et al, 1984), the pathogenicity and pathophysiology of neuro-angiostrongyliasis remain unclear (Morassutti and Graeff-Teixeira, 2012).…”