Selected article for: "amino acid and cell infect"

Author: Mordecai, Gideon J; Wilfert, Lena; Martin, Stephen J; Jones, Ian M; Schroeder, Declan C
Title: Diversity in a honey bee pathogen: first report of a third master variant of the Deformed Wing Virus quasispecies
  • Document date: 2015_11_17
  • ID: k2n6ropo_3
    Snippet: By existing as a diverse swarm of variants, viruses are able to co-occupy several biological niches. Certain biological traits may allow a virus to infect one cell type over another, known as cell tropism (Koyanagi et al., 1987) . Whether or not a virus is able to infect a susceptible cell depends firstly on recognition of a cellular receptor on the cell surface and secondly on intracellular host factors that dictate whether the host cell is perm.....
    Document: By existing as a diverse swarm of variants, viruses are able to co-occupy several biological niches. Certain biological traits may allow a virus to infect one cell type over another, known as cell tropism (Koyanagi et al., 1987) . Whether or not a virus is able to infect a susceptible cell depends firstly on recognition of a cellular receptor on the cell surface and secondly on intracellular host factors that dictate whether the host cell is permissive to virus replication. Therefore, amino acid substitutions caused by nucleotide mutations in the structural or nonstructural region of the virus genome can affect both the host range and cell tropism of a virus. When categorising viruses based on a phylogenetic relationship it is important to note that a single amino acid change can have a substantial effect on the phenotypic traits of a virus. Therefore, when a virus exists as a collection of variants or quasispecies, although the phylogeny and ancestry of the viruses may be similar, the host range, tropism, pathogenicity and epidemiology of the variants may differ greatly (Domingo et al., 2012) . In addition, recombination between these variants is a source of further variation (Moore et al., 2011) .

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