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Understanding viral host interactions that modulate nuclear transport and innate immunity

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International Union of Crystallography

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RNA viruses such as coronaviruses, flaviviruses, and henipaviruses represent major international health threats. Whilst these viruses replicate in the cytoplasm, they encode accessory proteins that target the host nuclear transport machinery to suppress innate immune pathways. Specifically, these virus proteins target the nuclear import receptor importin-a (IMPa) and inhibit host immune responses from entering the nucleus and triggering interferon (IFN) release. This immune evasion strategy is a critical component of virus pathogenicity, yet details of these interactions (including mechanism(s) of binding specificity with IMPa isoforms) remain unresolved. Here we describe the interfaces between these viral immune regulatory proteins and specific IMPA host receptors as targets for development of novel antivirals. © The Authors

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Tsimbalyuk, S., Smith, K. M., Edwards, M. R., Cross, E. M., Batra, J., Soares da Costa, T. P., Aragão, D., Basler, C. F., & Forwood, J. K. (2021). Understanding viral host interactions that modulate nuclear transport and innate immunity. Paper presented to the IUCr 2021, 25th Congress of the International Union of Crystallography, 14-22 August 2021, Prague, Czech Republic. In Acta Crystallographica Section A, A77, C98. doi:10.1107/S0108767321095817

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