Literature DB >> 30853585

Stronger together: Multi-genome transmission of measles virus.

Roberto Cattaneo1, Ryan C Donohue2, Alex R Generous2, Chanakha K Navaratnarajah2, Christian K Pfaller3.   

Abstract

Measles virus (MeV) is an immunosuppressive, extremely contagious RNA virus that remains a leading cause of death among children. MeV is dual-tropic: it replicates first in lymphatic tissue, causing immunosuppression, and then in epithelial cells of the upper airways, accounting for extremely efficient contagion. Efficient contagion is counter-intuitive because the enveloped MeV particles are large and relatively unstable. However, MeV particles can contain multiple genomes, which can code for proteins with different functional characteristics. These proteins can cooperate to promote virus spread in tissue culture, prompting the question of whether multi-genome MeV transmission may promote efficient MeV spread also in vivo. Consistent with this hypothesis, in well-differentiated primary human airway epithelia large genome populations spread rapidly through intercellular pores. In another line of research, it was shown that distinct lymphocytic-adapted and epithelial-adapted genome populations exist; cyclical adaptation studies indicate that suboptimal variants in one environment may constitute a low frequency reservoir for adaptation to the other environment. Altogether, these observations suggest that, in humans, MeV spread relies on en bloc genome transmission, and that genomic diversity is instrumental for rapid MeV dissemination within hosts.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cyclical adaptation; Epithelial spread; Measles virus; Quasispecies; Tissue adaptation; Virus transmission

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30853585      PMCID: PMC6461485          DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2019.03.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Virus Res        ISSN: 0168-1702            Impact factor:   3.303


  65 in total

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4.  An unwinding activity that covalently modifies its double-stranded RNA substrate.

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5.  Cell-to-Cell Contact and Nectin-4 Govern Spread of Measles Virus from Primary Human Myeloid Cells to Primary Human Airway Epithelial Cells.

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4.  Measles Virus Ribonucleoprotein Complexes Rapidly Spread across Well-Differentiated Primary Human Airway Epithelial Cells along F-Actin Rings.

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6.  Measles virus exits human airway epithelia within dislodged metabolically active infectious centers.

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7.  Spatio-temporal dynamics of intra-host variability in SARS-CoV-2 genomes.

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  8 in total

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