Home | About Journal | Web Links | E-mail Alerts | RSS RSS Icon | Browse
Previous Article Next Article

Repulsion of Superinfecting Virions: A Mechanism for Rapid Virus Spread

Source: Science 327, 873 (2010); doi:10.1126/science.1183173

Published January 21, 2010

PUBLICATION DATA
ISSN:
1553-9628 (online)
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef AAAS
Virginie Doceul, Michael Hollinshead, Lonneke van der Linden, and Geoffrey L. Smith
ff1Department of Virology, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, St Mary's Campus, Norfolk Place, London W2 1PG, UK.
Viruses are thought to spread across susceptible cells through an iterative process of infection, replication, and release, so that the rate of spread is limited by replication kinetics. Here, we show that vaccinia virus spreads across one cell every 75 minutes, fourfold faster than its replication cycle would permit. To explain this phenomenon, we found that newly infected cells express two surface proteins that mark cells as infected and, via exploitation of cellular machinery, induce the repulsion of superinfecting virions away toward uninfected cells. Mechanistically, early expression of proteins A33 and A36 was critical for virion repulsion and rapid spread, and cells expressing these proteins repelled exogenous virions rapidly. Additional spreading mechanisms may exist for other viruses that also spread faster than predicted by replication kinetics. ©2010 American Association for the Advancement of Science

(As supplied by publisher.)

History: Received October 12, 2009; accepted January 08, 2010; published January 21, 2010
Permalink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1183173
ADVERTISEMENT