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Early Events in Reovirus Infection Influence Induction of Innate Immune Response

Andrew T. Abad, Pranav Danthi

2022Journal of Virology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Viruses must infect host cells to replicate, often killing the host cell in the process. However, hosts can activate defenses to limit viral replication and protect the organism. To trigger these host defenses to viral infections, host cells must first recognize that they are infected. Mammalian orthoreovirus (reovirus) is a model system used to study host-virus interactions. This study identifies aspects of host and virus biology which determine the capacity of host cells to detect infection. Notably, entry of reovirus into host cells plays a critical role in determining the magnitude of immune response triggered during infection. Mutants of reovirus which can enter cells more rapidly are better at avoiding detection by the host. Additionally, reovirus can enter cells through multiple routes. Entry through some of these routes also helps reovirus evade detection.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyVirologyViral replicationProteasesViral entryRNA silencingEndosomeGenomeImmune systemInnate immune systemVirusRNAViral pathogenesisViral sheddingRIG-ICytoplasmCell biologyRNA interferenceGeneCellGeneticsBiochemistryEnzymeViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyRNA regulation and diseaseVirus-based gene therapy research
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