Viral infection: Moving through complex and dynamic cell-membrane structures

Commun Integr Biol. 2011 Jul;4(4):398-408. doi: 10.4161/cib.4.4.16716. Epub 2011 Jul 1.

Abstract

Viruses have developed different survival strategies in host cells by crossing cell-membrane compartments, during different steps of their viral life cycle. In fact, the non-regenerative viral membrane of enveloped viruses needs to encounter the dynamic cell-host membrane, during early steps of the infection process, in which both membranes fuse, either at cell-surface or in an endocytic compartment, to promote viral entry and infection. Once inside the cell, many viruses accomplish their replication process through exploiting or modulating membrane traffic, and generating specialized compartments to assure viral replication, viral budding and spreading, which also serve to evade the immune responses against the pathogen. In this review, we have attempted to present some data that highlight the importance of membrane dynamics during viral entry and replicative processes, in order to understand how viruses use and move through different complex and dynamic cell-membrane structures and how they use them to persist.

Keywords: exosomes and trogocytosis; membrane dynamics; membrane-associated viral factories; viral budding; viral fusion and entry; viral synapse and spreading.