Amphotropism

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Amphotropism' or amphotropic indicates that a pathogen or parasite like a virus or a bacterium has a wide host range and can infect more than one species or cell culture line. The range is often of a mammalian spread. Amphotropism can be most effectively described in comparison to ecotropic and pantropic pathogens.

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Distinctions and Functionality

Amphotropic pathogens are able to affect a relatively wide range of species by having their envelope glycoproteins attack receptors that, due to evolutionary conservation, are structurally similar across species. [1] By exploiting these similarities they are able to extend their range beyond typical ecotropic pathogens, which are only able to identify and attack a specific receptor. However, their range is not as wide as pantropic pathogens, which aren’t reliant on structural similarities to bind. [2]

Amphotropic Virus Examples

See also

References

  1. Meissner, Morgan E.; Talledge, Nathaniel; Mansky, Louis M. (2022-06-01). "Molecular Biology and Diversification of Human Retroviruses". Frontiers in Virology. 2. doi: 10.3389/fviro.2022.872599 . PMC   9242851 . PMID   35783361.
  2. Samanthi (November 2021). "What is the Difference Between Ecotropic Amphotropic and Pantropic Virus". DifferenceBetween.
  3. Coffin, John M; Hughes, Stephen H; Varmus, Harold E (1997). "Receptors". Retroviruses. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
  4. Sanchez, Savannah E; Goodman, Alan G; Omsland, Anders (2021). "Metabolic Plasticity Aids Amphotropism of Coxiella burnetii". Infect Immun. 89 (12): e0013521. doi:10.1128/IAI.00135-21. PMC   8594591 . PMID   34491791.