Immune Evasion Strategies of Ranaviruses and Innate Immune Responses to These Emerging Pathogens

Ranaviruses (RV, <em>Iridoviridae</em>) are large double-stranded DNA viruses that infect fish, amphibians and reptiles. For ecological and commercial reasons, considerable attention has been drawn to the increasing prevalence of ranaviral infections of wild populations a...

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Main Authors: Leon Grayfer, Francisco De Jesús Andino, Guangchun Chen, Gregory V. Chinchar, Jacques Robert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-06-01
Series:Viruses
Subjects:
FV3
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1999-4915/4/7/1075
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spelling doaj-e9228cf407184bb09ca3e3ac92fba7872020-11-25T00:22:33ZengMDPI AGViruses1999-49152012-06-01471075109210.3390/v4071075Immune Evasion Strategies of Ranaviruses and Innate Immune Responses to These Emerging PathogensLeon GrayferFrancisco De Jesús AndinoGuangchun ChenGregory V. ChincharJacques RobertRanaviruses (RV, <em>Iridoviridae</em>) are large double-stranded DNA viruses that infect fish, amphibians and reptiles. For ecological and commercial reasons, considerable attention has been drawn to the increasing prevalence of ranaviral infections of wild populations and in aquacultural settings. Importantly, RVs appear to be capable of crossing species barriers of numerous poikilotherms, suggesting that these pathogens possess a broad host range and potent immune evasion mechanisms. Indeed, while some of the 95–100 predicted ranavirus genes encode putative evasion proteins (e.g., vIFα, vCARD), roughly two-thirds of them do not share significant sequence identity with known viral or eukaryotic genes. Accordingly, the investigation of ranaviral virulence and immune evasion strategies is promising for elucidating potential antiviral targets. In this regard, recombination-based technologies are being employed to knock out gene candidates in the best-characterized RV member, Frog Virus (FV3). Concurrently, by using animal infection models with extensively characterized immune systems, such as the African clawed frog, <em>Xenopus laevis</em>, it is becoming evident that components of innate immunity are at the forefront of virus-host interactions. For example, cells of the macrophage lineage represent important combatants of RV infections while themselves serving as targets for viral infection, maintenance and possibly dissemination. This review focuses on the recent advances in the understanding of the RV immune evasion strategies with emphasis on the roles of the innate immune system in ranaviral infections.http://www.mdpi.com/1999-4915/4/7/1075IridovirusranavirusFV3frog virus 3innate immunitymacrophageanti-viralimmune-evasioncytokinesinflammation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leon Grayfer
Francisco De Jesús Andino
Guangchun Chen
Gregory V. Chinchar
Jacques Robert
spellingShingle Leon Grayfer
Francisco De Jesús Andino
Guangchun Chen
Gregory V. Chinchar
Jacques Robert
Immune Evasion Strategies of Ranaviruses and Innate Immune Responses to These Emerging Pathogens
Viruses
Iridovirus
ranavirus
FV3
frog virus 3
innate immunity
macrophage
anti-viral
immune-evasion
cytokines
inflammation
author_facet Leon Grayfer
Francisco De Jesús Andino
Guangchun Chen
Gregory V. Chinchar
Jacques Robert
author_sort Leon Grayfer
title Immune Evasion Strategies of Ranaviruses and Innate Immune Responses to These Emerging Pathogens
title_short Immune Evasion Strategies of Ranaviruses and Innate Immune Responses to These Emerging Pathogens
title_full Immune Evasion Strategies of Ranaviruses and Innate Immune Responses to These Emerging Pathogens
title_fullStr Immune Evasion Strategies of Ranaviruses and Innate Immune Responses to These Emerging Pathogens
title_full_unstemmed Immune Evasion Strategies of Ranaviruses and Innate Immune Responses to These Emerging Pathogens
title_sort immune evasion strategies of ranaviruses and innate immune responses to these emerging pathogens
publisher MDPI AG
series Viruses
issn 1999-4915
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Ranaviruses (RV, <em>Iridoviridae</em>) are large double-stranded DNA viruses that infect fish, amphibians and reptiles. For ecological and commercial reasons, considerable attention has been drawn to the increasing prevalence of ranaviral infections of wild populations and in aquacultural settings. Importantly, RVs appear to be capable of crossing species barriers of numerous poikilotherms, suggesting that these pathogens possess a broad host range and potent immune evasion mechanisms. Indeed, while some of the 95–100 predicted ranavirus genes encode putative evasion proteins (e.g., vIFα, vCARD), roughly two-thirds of them do not share significant sequence identity with known viral or eukaryotic genes. Accordingly, the investigation of ranaviral virulence and immune evasion strategies is promising for elucidating potential antiviral targets. In this regard, recombination-based technologies are being employed to knock out gene candidates in the best-characterized RV member, Frog Virus (FV3). Concurrently, by using animal infection models with extensively characterized immune systems, such as the African clawed frog, <em>Xenopus laevis</em>, it is becoming evident that components of innate immunity are at the forefront of virus-host interactions. For example, cells of the macrophage lineage represent important combatants of RV infections while themselves serving as targets for viral infection, maintenance and possibly dissemination. This review focuses on the recent advances in the understanding of the RV immune evasion strategies with emphasis on the roles of the innate immune system in ranaviral infections.
topic Iridovirus
ranavirus
FV3
frog virus 3
innate immunity
macrophage
anti-viral
immune-evasion
cytokines
inflammation
url http://www.mdpi.com/1999-4915/4/7/1075
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