6533b7ddfe1ef96bd1274878
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Virus-host interactome: Putting the accent on how it changes
Guillermo RodrigoGuillermo RodrigoJosé-antonio DaròsSantiago F. ElenaSantiago F. ElenaSantiago F. Elenasubject
0301 basic medicineEvolutionSystems biologyBiophysicsComplex diseaseDiseaseComputational biologyBiologyBioinformaticsBiochemistryInteractomeVirusViral Proteins03 medical and health sciencesSpatio-Temporal AnalysisProtein networkVirologyStress (linguistics)AnimalsHumansProtein Interaction MapsVirus host030102 biochemistry & molecular biologyHost (biology)030104 developmental biologyVirus DiseasesHost-Pathogen InteractionsSystems biologydescription
[EN] Viral infections are extremely complex processes that could only be well understood by precisely characterizing the interaction networks between the virus and the host components. In recent years, much effort has gone in this directionwith the aimof unveiling themolecular basis of viral pathology. These networks are mostly formed by viral and host proteins, and are expected to be dynamic bothwith time and space (i.e., with the progression of infection, as well as with the virus and host genotypes; what we call plastodynamic). This largely overlooked spatio-temporal evolution urgently calls for a change both in the conceptual paradigms and experimental techniques used so far to characterize virus-host interactions. More generally, molecular plasticity and temporal dynamics are unavoidable components of themechanisms that underlie any complex disease; components whose understandingwill eventually enhance our ability to modulate those networkswith the aimof improving disease treatments.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-01-01 | Journal of Proteomics |