VZV: pathogenesis and the disease consequences of primary infection
- PMID: 21348076
- Bookshelf ID: NBK47382
VZV: pathogenesis and the disease consequences of primary infection
Excerpt
VZV is a human alphaherpesvirus that causes varicella (chickenpox) as the primary infection and establishes latency in sensory ganglia. VZV reactivation results in herpes zoster (shingles). During the course of varicella and zoster, VZV infects differentiated human cells that exist within unique tissue microenvironments in humans. The tropism of VZV for skin is the most obvious clinical manifestation of VZV infection, producing the vesicular cutaneous lesions that are associated with varicella and zoster. The site of initial VZV infection in naïve hosts is thought to be mucosal epithelial cells of the upper respiratory tract. Entry is presumed to follow inoculation of the respiratory epithelium with infectious virus transmitted by aerosolized respiratory droplets or by contact with virus in varicella or zoster skin lesions (Arvin, ; Grose, 1981). VZV in respiratory or conjunctival mucosal cells has the opportunity to interact with and infect local immune system cells and those in adjacent lymphoid tissues. Trafficking of infected peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), which appear to be predominantly T-cells, to the skin is thought to give rise to crops of cutaneous vesicles. Skin lesions contain VZV material associated with necrotic debris and, unlike virus grown in vitro, cell-free, infectious particles are detected in vesicular fluid (Williams et al., 1962). The life cycle of VZV is completed upon its transmission to a susceptible host from an individual with varicella, or it can be postponed for decades by establishing latency in neurons and transmitting to future generations during episodes of zoster.
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2007.
Sections
- Introduction
- Systems for evaluating determinants of VZV pathogenesis in human skin and T-cells
- Effects of VZV replication on cellular cyclin-dependent kinases and cyclins
- Investigation of events in the pathogenesis of primary VZV infection in the SCIDhu model
- The role of VZV glycoproteins in T-cell and skin tropism
- Glycoprotein C
- Glycoprotein E
- Glycoprotein I
- The role of regulatory proteins and viral kinases in T-cell and skin tropism
- IE62 protein
- IE63 protein
- ORF64 protein
- ORF10 protein
- ORF47 protein
- ORF66 protein
- Disease consequences of primary VZV infection in healthy and immunocompromised hosts
- Varicella in the immunocompromised host
- Varicella in pregnancy and the newborn
- Summary
- References
References
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- Knipe, HowleyArvin, A. M. (2001a). Varicella-zoster virus. 4th edn. In Fields Virology, eds., Vol. 2, pp. 2731–2768. Philadelphia: Lippincott-Raven
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- Arvin A. M. Varicella-zoster virus: molecular virology and virus–host interactions. Curr. Opin. Microbiol. 2001b;4(4):442–449. - PubMed
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- Asano Y., Itakura N., Kajita Y., et al. Severity of viremia and clinical findings in children with varicella. J. Infect. Dis. 1990;161(6):1095–1098. - PubMed
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