Dissemination and replication of viruses into hosts is a multistep process where viral particles infect, navigate, and indoctrinate various cell types. Viruses can reach tissues that are distant from their infection site by subverting subcellular mechanisms in ways that are, sometimes, disruptive. Modeling these steps, at appropriate resolution and within animal models, is cumbersome. Yet, mimicking these strategies
in vitro
fails to recapitulate the complexity of the cellular ecosystem. Here, we will discuss relevant
in vivo
platforms to dissect the cellular and molecular programs governing viral dissemination and briefly discuss organoid and
ex vivo
alternatives. We will focus on the zebrafish model and will describe how it provides a transparent window to unravel new cellular mechanisms of viral dissemination
in vivo
.