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Usage Information

Herpesvirus latency
Jeffrey I. Cohen
Jeffrey I. Cohen
Published May 4, 2020
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2020;130(7):3361-3369. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI136225.
View: Text | PDF
Review Series

Herpesvirus latency

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Abstract

Herpesviruses infect virtually all humans and establish lifelong latency and reactivate to infect other humans. Latency requires multiple functions: maintaining the herpesvirus genome in the nuclei of cells; partitioning the viral genome to daughter cells in dividing cells; avoiding recognition by the immune system by limiting protein expression; producing noncoding viral RNAs (including microRNAs) to suppress lytic gene expression or regulate cellular protein expression that could otherwise eliminate virus-infected cells; modulating the epigenetic state of the viral genome to regulate viral gene expression; and reactivating to infect other hosts. Licensed antivirals inhibit virus replication, but do not affect latency. Understanding of the mechanisms of latency is leading to novel approaches to destroy latently infected cells or inhibit reactivation from latency.

Authors

Jeffrey I. Cohen

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Usage data is cumulative from July 2024 through July 2025.

Usage JCI PMC
Text version 3,721 4,076
PDF 457 326
Figure 399 19
Table 191 0
Citation downloads 121 0
Totals 4,889 4,421
Total Views 9,310
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Usage information is collected from two different sources: this site (JCI) and Pubmed Central (PMC). JCI information (compiled daily) shows human readership based on methods we employ to screen out robotic usage. PMC information (aggregated monthly) is also similarly screened of robotic usage.

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