1. Immunity and resistance to viruses
- Author
-
Susan Payne
- Subjects
Intrinsic immunity ,Innate immune system ,viruses ,RNA virus ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Virus ,Immune system ,Viral replication ,Interferon ,Immunity ,Immunology ,medicine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Humans and other animals have a complex set of protective responses to virus infections. In their basic features they are similar to immune responses to other pathogens. First-line defenses against viral infection are physical barriers such as skin. Innate responses to viral infections are rapid responses that depend on the recognition of pathogenic-associated molecular patterns shared among groups of viruses. For example, the long double-stranded RNA molecules that form during RNA virus replication. Innate responses depend on the activation of signaling pathways. In the case of viruses, these trigger the products of a large set of antiviral molecules. Interferons (IFNs) are key antiviral cytokines. They are produced by an infected cell and are released to activate antiviral responses in uninfected cells. The genes that are activated by IFNs are the so-called IFN-stimulated genes. The protein products of these genes are often inactive until activated by virus infection. The truly ancient interactions between cells and viruses are illustrated by the so-called intrinsic immune responses. These are innate responses to very specific viruses. The study of intrinsic responses reveals the continuous, long-term process of virus-host coevolution. Adaptive immune responses recognize specific pathogens. They are slower to develop, but have an important “memory” component. Adaptive responses include antibodies that inhibit (neutralize) viruses as well as cell-based responses that recognize and kill infected cells. Effective vaccines trigger protective, long-lasting adaptive responses. With the myriad of antiviral responses available to organisms, it is surprising that viruses exist! However they do, because they have evolved responses to our responses! They have even subverted antiviral responses to aid in their replication. The interactions between host and virus are multilayered and complex. The end result is often a situation where virus replication is limited but eliminated.
- Published
- 2023
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