Spread of HTLV-I Between Lymphocytes by Virus-Induced Polarization of the Cytoskeleton
Kagoshima University · University of Oxford · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Cell contact is required for efficient transmission of human T cell leukemia virus- type 1 (HTLV-I) between cells and between individuals, because naturally infected lymphocytes produce virtually no cell-free infectious HTLV-I particles. However, the mechanism of cell-to-cell spread of HTLV-I is not understood. We show here that cell contact rapidly induces polarization of the cytoskeleton of the infected cell to the cell-cell junction. HTLV-I core (Gag protein) complexes and the HTLV-I genome accumulate at the cell-cell junction and are then transferred to the uninfected cell. Other lymphotropic viruses, such as HIV-1, may similarly subvert normal T cell physiology to allow efficient propagation between…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.32
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Cytoskeleton
- Virology
- Polarization (electrochemistry)
- Virus
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Cell biology
- Genetics
- Good health and well-being