Uirusu
Online ISSN : 1884-3433
Print ISSN : 0042-6857
ISSN-L : 0042-6857
SUGIURA Memorial Incentive Award for Young Virologist, The Japanese Society for Virology, 2019
Dynamic changes of cellular environment during Epstein-Barr virus productive replication
Yoshitaka SATO
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2020 Volume 70 Issue 1 Pages 83-90

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Abstract

Productive (lytic) replication of DNA viruses elicits host cell DNA damage responses, which cause both beneficial and detrimental effects on viral replication. Viruses utilize them and selectively cancel the 'noisy' downstream signaling pathways, leading to maintain high S-phase CDK activities required for viral replication. To achieve this fine tuning of cellular environment, herpesviruses encode many (>70) genes in their genome, which are expressed in a strictly regulated temporal cascade (immediate-early, early, and late). Here, I introduce and discuss how Epstein-Barr virus, an oncogenic herpesvirus, hijacks the cellular environment and adapt it for the progeny production.

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