Lipid Tales of Viral Replication and Transmission
- PMID: 27838086
- PMCID: PMC5318230
- DOI: 10.1016/j.tcb.2016.09.011
Lipid Tales of Viral Replication and Transmission
Abstract
Positive-strand RNA viruses are the largest group of RNA viruses on Earth and cellular membranes are critical for all aspects of their life cycle, from entry and replication to exit. In particular, membranes serve as platforms for replication and as carriers to transmit these viruses to other cells, the latter either as an envelope surrounding a single virus or as the vesicle containing a population of viruses. Notably, many animal and human viruses appear to induce and exploit phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate/cholesterol-enriched membranes for replication, whereas many plant and insect-vectored animal viruses utilize phosphatidylethanolamine/cholesterol-enriched membranes for the same purpose; and phosphatidylserine-enriched membrane carriers are widely used by both single and populations of viruses for transmission. Here I discuss the implications for viral pathogenesis and therapeutic development of this remarkable convergence on specific membrane lipid blueprints for replication and transmission.
Keywords: RNA virus; autophagy; cholesterol; exosome; membrane; multivesicular body; phosphatidylethanolamine; phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate; phosphatidylserine; population.
Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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References
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- den Boon JA, Ahlquist P. Organelle-like membrane compartmentalization of positive-strand RNA virus replication factories. Annu Rev Microbiol. 2010;64:241–256. - PubMed
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