To sense or not to sense viral RNA—essentials of coronavirus innate immune evasion

Abstract:

An essential function of innate immunity is to distinguish self from non-self and receptors have evolved to specifically recognize viral components and initiate the expression of antiviral proteins to restrict viral replication. Coronaviruses are RNA viruses that replicate in the host cytoplasm and evade innate immune sensing in most cell types, either passively by hiding their viral signatures and limiting exposure to sensors or actively, by encoding viral antagonists to counteract the effects of interferons. Since many cytoplasmic viruses exploit similar mechanisms of innate immune evasion, mechanistic insight into the direct interplay between viral RNA, viral RNA-processing enzymes, cellular sensors and antiviral proteins will be highly relevant to develop novel antiviral targets and to restrict important animal and human infections.

SEEK ID: https://fairdomhub.org/publications/508

DOI: 10.1016/j.mib.2014.05.005

Projects: COVID-19 Disease Map

Publication type: Journal

Journal: Current Opinion in Microbiology

Citation: Current Opinion in Microbiology 20:69-75

Date Published: 1st Aug 2014

URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1369527414000526

Registered Mode: imported from a bibtex file

Authors: Eveline Kindler, Volker Thiel

help Submitter
Citation
Kindler, E., & Thiel, V. (2014). To sense or not to sense viral RNA—essentials of coronavirus innate immune evasion. In Current Opinion in Microbiology (Vol. 20, pp. 69–75). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mib.2014.05.005
Activity

Views: 938

Created: 8th Apr 2020 at 20:13

Last updated: 8th Dec 2022 at 17:26

help Tags

This item has not yet been tagged.

help Attributions

None

Powered by
(v.1.16.0)
Copyright © 2008 - 2024 The University of Manchester and HITS gGmbH