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The acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus.

Characterization of specific host cell receptors for enveloped viruses is a difficult problem because many enveloped viruses bind to a variety of substrates which are not obviously related to tissue tropisms in the intact host. Viruses with a limited cellular tropism in infected animals present usef...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lentz, T. L., Burrage, T. G., Smith, A. L., Tignor, G. H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1983
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2589619/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6367238
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author Lentz, T. L.
Burrage, T. G.
Smith, A. L.
Tignor, G. H.
author_facet Lentz, T. L.
Burrage, T. G.
Smith, A. L.
Tignor, G. H.
author_sort Lentz, T. L.
collection PubMed
description Characterization of specific host cell receptors for enveloped viruses is a difficult problem because many enveloped viruses bind to a variety of substrates which are not obviously related to tissue tropisms in the intact host. Viruses with a limited cellular tropism in infected animals present useful models for studying the mechanisms by which virus attachment regulates the disease process. Rabies virus is a rhabdovirus which exhibits a marked neuronotropism in infected animals. Limited data suggest that spread occurs by transsynaptic transfer of virus. The results of recent experiments at Yale suggest that viral antigen is localized very soon after injection at neuromuscular junctions, the motor nerve endings on muscle tissue. On cultured muscle cells, similar co-localization with the acetylcholine receptor is seen both before and after virus multiplication. Pretreatment of these cells with some ligands of the acetylcholine receptor results in reduced viral infection. These findings suggest that a neurotransmitter receptor or a closely associated molecule may serve as a specific host cell receptor for rabies virus and thus may be responsible for the tissue tropism exhibited by this virus. In addition to clarifying aspects of rabies virus pathogenesis, these studies have broad implications regarding the mechanism by which other viruses or viral immunizations might mediate autoimmune diseases such as myasthenia gravis.
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spelling pubmed-25896192008-11-28 The acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus. Lentz, T. L. Burrage, T. G. Smith, A. L. Tignor, G. H. Yale J Biol Med Research Article Characterization of specific host cell receptors for enveloped viruses is a difficult problem because many enveloped viruses bind to a variety of substrates which are not obviously related to tissue tropisms in the intact host. Viruses with a limited cellular tropism in infected animals present useful models for studying the mechanisms by which virus attachment regulates the disease process. Rabies virus is a rhabdovirus which exhibits a marked neuronotropism in infected animals. Limited data suggest that spread occurs by transsynaptic transfer of virus. The results of recent experiments at Yale suggest that viral antigen is localized very soon after injection at neuromuscular junctions, the motor nerve endings on muscle tissue. On cultured muscle cells, similar co-localization with the acetylcholine receptor is seen both before and after virus multiplication. Pretreatment of these cells with some ligands of the acetylcholine receptor results in reduced viral infection. These findings suggest that a neurotransmitter receptor or a closely associated molecule may serve as a specific host cell receptor for rabies virus and thus may be responsible for the tissue tropism exhibited by this virus. In addition to clarifying aspects of rabies virus pathogenesis, these studies have broad implications regarding the mechanism by which other viruses or viral immunizations might mediate autoimmune diseases such as myasthenia gravis. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1983 /pmc/articles/PMC2589619/ /pubmed/6367238 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Lentz, T. L.
Burrage, T. G.
Smith, A. L.
Tignor, G. H.
The acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus.
title The acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus.
title_full The acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus.
title_fullStr The acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus.
title_full_unstemmed The acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus.
title_short The acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus.
title_sort acetylcholine receptor as a cellular receptor for rabies virus.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2589619/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6367238
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