Author: Aliyu, Isah Abubakar; Kumurya, Abdulhadi Sale; Bala, Jamilu Abubakar; Yahaya, Hassan; Saidu, Hayatu
Title: Proteomes, kinases and signalling pathways in virusâ€induced filopodia, as potential antiviral therapeutics targets Cord-id: ayz8zl37 Document date: 2020_12_12
ID: ayz8zl37
Snippet: Filopodia are thin fingerâ€like protrusions at the surface of cells that are internally occupied with bundles of tightly parallel actin filaments. They play significant roles in cellular physiological processes, such as adhesion to extracellular matrix, guidance towards chemoâ€attractants and in wound healing. Filopodia were recently reported to play important roles in viral infection including initial viral attachment to host cells, cell surfing, viral trafficking, internalization, budding, v
Document: Filopodia are thin fingerâ€like protrusions at the surface of cells that are internally occupied with bundles of tightly parallel actin filaments. They play significant roles in cellular physiological processes, such as adhesion to extracellular matrix, guidance towards chemoâ€attractants and in wound healing. Filopodia were recently reported to play important roles in viral infection including initial viral attachment to host cells, cell surfing, viral trafficking, internalization, budding, virus release and spread to other cells in a form that would avoid the host immune system. The detailed virusâ€host protein interactions underlying most of these processes remain to be elucidated. This review will describe some reported virusâ€host protein interactions on filopodia with the aim of identifying potential new antiâ€virus therapeutic targets. Exploring this research area may lead to the development of novel classes of antiâ€viral therapeutics that can block signalling pathways used by the virus to trigger filopodia formation. Successful compounds would inhibit initial virus attachment, formation of filopodia, expression of putative virus binding protein, extracellular virus trafficking, and budding.
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