Author: Louz, Derrick; Bergmans, Hans E.; Loos, Birgit P.; Hoeben, Rob C.
Title: Crossâ€species transfer of viruses: implications for the use of viral vectors in biomedical research, gene therapy and as liveâ€virus vaccines Cord-id: du6rqc6i Document date: 2005_6_29
ID: du6rqc6i
Snippet: Summary All living organisms are continuously exposed to a plethora of viruses. In general, viruses tend to be restricted to the natural host species which they infect. From time to time viruses cross the hostâ€range barrier expanding their host range. However, in very rare cases crossâ€species transfer is followed by the establishment and persistence of a virus in the new host species, which may result in disease. Recent examples of viruses that have crossed the species barrier from animal re
Document: Summary All living organisms are continuously exposed to a plethora of viruses. In general, viruses tend to be restricted to the natural host species which they infect. From time to time viruses cross the hostâ€range barrier expanding their host range. However, in very rare cases crossâ€species transfer is followed by the establishment and persistence of a virus in the new host species, which may result in disease. Recent examples of viruses that have crossed the species barrier from animal reservoirs to humans are hantavirus, haemorrhagic fever viruses, arboviruses, Nipah and Hendra viruses, avian influenza virus (AI), monkeypox virus, and the SARSâ€associated coronavirus (SARSâ€CoV). The opportunities for crossâ€species transfer of mammalian viruses have increased in recent years due to increased contact between humans and animal reservoirs. However, it is difficult to predict when such events will take place since the viral adaptation that is needed to accomplish this is multifactorial and stochastic. Against this background the intensified use of viruses and their genetically modified variants as viral gene transfer vectors for biomedical research, experimental gene therapy and for liveâ€vector vaccines is a cause for concern. This review addresses a number of potential risk factors and their implications for activities with viral vectors from the perspective of crossâ€species transfer of viruses in nature, with emphasis on the occurrence of hostâ€range mutants resulting from either cell culture or tropism engineering. The issues are raised with the intention to assist in risk assessments for activities with vector viruses. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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