Mechanisms of evasion of the type I interferon antiviral response by flaviviruses

MS Diamond - Journal of interferon & cytokine research, 2009 - liebertpub.com
Journal of interferon & cytokine research, 2009liebertpub.com
Virus survival and the ability to cause disease in mammalian hosts depend on their ability to
avoid recognition and control by the interferon signal transduction and effector pathways.
Flaviviruses comprise a large family of nonsegmented positive sense enveloped
cytoplasmic RNA viruses, many of which are globally important human pathogens. Although
the mechanistic details are still being dissected, new insight has emerged as to how a
flavivirus minimizes the antiviral activity of type I interferon (IFN) to establish productive and …
Virus survival and the ability to cause disease in mammalian hosts depend on their ability to avoid recognition and control by the interferon signal transduction and effector pathways. Flaviviruses comprise a large family of nonsegmented positive sense enveloped cytoplasmic RNA viruses, many of which are globally important human pathogens. Although the mechanistic details are still being dissected, new insight has emerged as to how a flavivirus minimizes the antiviral activity of type I interferon (IFN) to establish productive and potentially lethal infection. This review will summarize our current understanding of how mammalian cells recognize flaviviruses to induce an inhibitory IFN response and the countermeasures this group of viruses has evolved to antagonize this response.
Mary Ann Liebert