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How vaccinia virus has evolved to subvert the host immune response.


ABSTRACT: Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites and are some of the most rapidly evolving and diverse pathogens encountered by the host immune system. Large complicated viruses, such as poxviruses, have evolved a plethora of proteins to disrupt host immune signalling in their battle against immune surveillance. Recent X-ray crystallographic analysis of these viral immunomodulators has helped form an emerging picture of the molecular details of virus-host interactions. In this review we consider some of these immune evasion strategies as they apply to poxviruses, from a structural perspective, with specific examples from the European SPINE2-Complexes initiative. Structures of poxvirus immunomodulators reveal the capacity of viruses to mimic and compete against the host immune system, using a diverse range of structural folds that are unique or acquired from their hosts with both enhanced and unexpectedly divergent functions.

SUBMITTER: Bahar MW 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3477310 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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How vaccinia virus has evolved to subvert the host immune response.

Bahar Mohammad W MW   Graham Stephen C SC   Chen Ron A-J RA   Cooray Samantha S   Smith Geoffrey L GL   Stuart David I DI   Grimes Jonathan M JM  

Journal of structural biology 20110317 2


Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites and are some of the most rapidly evolving and diverse pathogens encountered by the host immune system. Large complicated viruses, such as poxviruses, have evolved a plethora of proteins to disrupt host immune signalling in their battle against immune surveillance. Recent X-ray crystallographic analysis of these viral immunomodulators has helped form an emerging picture of the molecular details of virus-host interactions. In this review we consider som  ...[more]

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