The role of exosome and the escrt pathway on enveloped virus infection

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Abstract

The endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) system consists of periph-eral membrane protein complexes ESCRT-0,-I,-II,-III VPS4-VTA1, and ALIX homodimer. This system plays an important role in the degradation of non-essential or dangerous plasma membrane proteins, the biogenesis of lysosomes and yeast vacuoles, the budding of most enveloped viruses, and promoting membrane shedding of cytokinesis. Recent results show that exosomes and the ESCRT pathway play important roles in virus infection. This review mainly focuses on the roles of exosomes and the ESCRT pathway in virus assembly, budding, and infection of enveloped viruses. The elaboration of the mechanism of exosomes and the ESCRT pathway in some enveloped viruses provides important implications for the further study of the infection mechanism of other enveloped viruses.

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Ju, Y., Bai, H., Ren, L., & Zhang, L. (2021, August 2). The role of exosome and the escrt pathway on enveloped virus infection. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22169060

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