Chapter category: Viruses
Class II Fusion Proteins
Viral Entry into Host Cells
Edited by: Stefan Pohlmann and Graham SimmonsISBN: TBA
» Get more information about this book at landesbioscience.com «
Chapter authors:
Yorgo Modis
[+] view image
Additional chapters from this book:
Class II Fusion Proteins
Yorgo Modis
Enveloped viruses rely on fusion proteins in their envelope to fuse the viral membrane to the host-cell membrane. This key step in viral entry delivers the viral genome into the cytoplasm for re...
Entry of Herpesviruses into Cells: The Enigma Variations
Claude Krummenacher, Andrea Carfí, Roselyn J. Eisenberg and Gary H. Cohen
The entry of herpesviruses into their target cells is complex at many levels. Virus entry proceeds by a succession of interactions between viral envelope glycoproteins and molecules on the cell ...
Paramyxovirus Entry
Katharine N. Bossart and Christopher C. Broder
The family Paramyxoviridae consists of a group of large, enveloped, negative-sense, single-stranded RNA viruses and contains many important human and animal pathogens. Molecular and biochemical ...
Attachment Factors
Clare L. Jolly and Quentin J. Sattentau
As obligate intracellular parasites, viruses must bind to, and enter, permissive host cells in order to gain access to the cellular machinery that is required for their replication. The very lar...
Flaviviruses
Camilo Ansarah-Sobrinho, Steevenson Nelson and Theodore C. Pierson
Flaviviruses are a group of positive-stranded RNA viruses that enter target cells via an endocytic pathway and fuse with target cell membranes in a pH-dependent fashion. Interactions between hos...
Reovirus Receptors, Cell Entry, and Proapoptotic Signaling
Pranav Danthi, Geoffrey H. Holm, Thilo Stehle and Terence S. Dermody
Mammalian orthoreoviruses (reoviruses) are members of the Reoviridae family of viruses. Reoviruses contain 10 double-stranded (ds) RNA gene segments enclosed in two concentric protein shells, ca...
Entry of Influenza Virus
Xiangjie Sun and Gary R. Whittaker
As a major pathogen of human and certain animal species, influenza virus causes wide spread and potentially devastating disease. To initiate infection, the virus first binds to cellular receptors...
Entry of Rhabdoviruses into Animal Cells
Andrew D. Regan and Gary R. Whittaker
Entry is the first step in the infectious life cycle of a virus. In the case of rhabdoviruses, entry is facilitated exclusively by the envelope glycoprotein G and its interactions with the host ...

