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An Overview of the Infectious Cycle of Bunyaviruses

Hani Boshra

2022Viruses38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bunyaviruses represent the largest group of RNA viruses and are the causative agent of a variety of febrile and hemorrhagic illnesses. Originally characterized as a single serotype in Africa, the number of described bunyaviruses now exceeds over 500, with its presence detected around the world. These predominantly tri-segmented, single-stranded RNA viruses are transmitted primarily through arthropod and rodent vectors and can infect a wide variety of animals and plants. Although encoding for a small number of proteins, these viruses can inflict potentially fatal disease outcomes and have even developed strategies to suppress the innate antiviral immune mechanisms of the infected host. This short review will attempt to provide an overall description of the order Bunyavirales, describing the mechanisms behind their infection, replication, and their evasion of the host immune response. Furthermore, the historical context of these viruses will be presented, starting from their original discovery almost 80 years ago to the most recent research pertaining to viral replication and host immune response.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyVirologyHost (biology)Immune systemContext (archaeology)RNAViral replicationVirusInnate immune systemImmunologyGeneGeneticsPaleontologyViral Infections and VectorsVector-Borne Animal DiseasesFire effects on ecosystems
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