Scientist Solutions: International Life Science Community By Scientists For Scientists
    
Home » Forums » Virology » Viral Immunology » Viral Persistence

Thanks to our sponsors who make this site possible

Viral Persistence

RSS Feed

Would you like to save this topic, event, protocol or job so you can find it again easily?

Just click the "Save to My Lab Drawer" link and the item will be saved in the My Lab Drawer section of your bench space.

Available to members only. Please log in or register for your free account now.

autobibliophile
United Kingdom

Send PM
See Mini bio

Status: Frog Egg
Frog Egg
Topic Started by autobibliophile
on 8/28/2005 8:02 AM   
Reply to this post Go to the top of the page

The Sallie cycle, modulating RNA polymerase, describes how RNA viruses avoid immune surveillance and cause persistent infection.





http://www.virologyj.com/content/2/1/10
Hepatitis C (HCV), hepatitis B (HBV), the human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV), and other viruses that replicate via RNA intermediaries, cause an enormous burden of disease and premature death worldwide. These viruses circulate within infected hosts as vast populations of closely related, but genetically diverse, molecules known as "quasispecies". The mechanism(s) by which this extreme genetic and antigenic diversity is stably maintained are unclear, but are fundamental to understanding viral persistence and pathobiology. The persistence of HCV, an RNA virus, is especially problematic and HCV stability, maintained despite rapid genomic mutation, is highly paradoxical. This paper presents the hypothesis, and evidence, that viruses capable of persistent infection autoregulate replication and the likely mechanism mediating autoregulation Replicative Homeostasis is described. Replicative homeostasis causes formation of stable, but highly reactive, equilibria that drive quasispecies expansion and generates escape mutation. Replicative homeostasis explains both viral kinetics and the enigma of RNA quasispecies stability and provides a rational, mechanistic basis for all observed viral behaviours and host responses. More importantly, this paradigm has specific therapeutic implication and defines, precisely, new approaches to antiviral therapy. Replicative homeostasis may also modulate cellular gene expression.


Replies
xhz
China

Send PM
See Mini bio

Status: Frog Egg
Frog Egg
Posted By xhz
on 9/5/2006 23:10 PM   
Reply to this post Go to the top of the page


Dear friend,

Can you tell me whether eukaryotic cell have some kind of system to destroy or exclude specificlly the intruded virus DNA and could you recommend me some related publications?





Tracy
United States

Send PM
See Mini bio

Status: Member
Member
Posted By Tracy
on 9/9/2006 16:39 PM   
Reply to this post Go to the top of the page

xhz said:

Dear friend,

Can you tell me whether eukaryotic cell have some kind of system to destroy or exclude specificlly the intruded virus DNA and could you recommend me some related publications?





Double strand RNA of virus would trigger the Interferon pathway and activate PKR kinase and get degraded. At least this is one way to destroy the virus.

http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/96/21/11693.pdf#search=%22PKR%20pathway%20virus%22



xhz
China

Send PM
See Mini bio

Status: Frog Egg
Frog Egg
Posted By xhz
on 9/18/2006 1:04 AM   
Reply to this post Go to the top of the page

Tracy said:
xhz said:

Dear friend,

Can you tell me whether eukaryotic cell have some kind of system to destroy or exclude specificlly the intruded virus DNA and could you recommend me some related publications?





Double strand RNA of virus would trigger the Interferon pathway and activate PKR kinase and get degraded. At least this is one way to destroy the virus.

http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/96/21/11693.pdf#search=%22PKR%20pathway%20virus%22



Thank you very much for your generous reply.



As a Scientist Solutions member, you are able to register a positive vote for any topic which you believe is useful and relevant to our board or any reply which you believe is especially well worded and helpful.

By participating in the voting, you will be helping to identify the best topics & replies on the board.

You may vote once for any one post, and you may not vote for your own posts.

A post (topic or reply) will earn one "thumbs up" icon for every 10 votes received (up to 3 thumbs up), and the person who made the post will also earn two bonus points.

learn more about member points.



Click here to
Become a member & join our
community (It's easy & free)
Already a member? Please log in
User Name  
Password  
Forget Password?
Scientists
Not finding the answer you need?

Post a new topic

You must be logged in to post. Log in above.
Not a member yet? Click here to register
(it's free)
Thank You to Our Sponsor