Title of article
Introduction: articles from the XII International Congress of Virology
Author/Authors
Hans-Dieter Klenk and Winfried Weissenhorn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
10
From page
197
To page
206
Abstract
Neuroinvasion by herpesviruses requires entry into nerve endings in the periphery, transport to the cell body, replication in the cell body, axonal transport to the synapse and transneuronal viral spread. Entry occurs after receptor binding by fusion of virion envelope and cellular plasma membrane followed by microtubuli-assisted transport of capsids to the nuclear pore. By transneuronal spread, the virus gains access to synaptically linked neuronal circuits. A common set of herpesvirus glycoproteins is involved in entry and direct viral cell–cell spread. However, both processes can be distinguished by involvement of additional viral components. Interestingly, transneuronal spread appears to be functionally linked to intracytoplasmic formation of mature virions. This review will focus on the importance of herpesvirus envelope glycoproteins for infection of neurons and transneuronal spread, and their influence on viral pathogenesis.
Keywords
Glycoproteins , Neuronal infection , Herpesviruses
Journal title
Virus Research
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Virus Research
Record number
785784
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