Laboratory of Pathology and Molecular Diagnostics, Aquaculture Department, Instituto Politécnico Nacional - CIIDIR Unidad Sinaloa, Guasave, Mexico.
Front Immunol. 2021 Jun 11;12:674216. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.674216. eCollection 2021.
Virus interference is a phenomenon in which two viruses interact within a host, affecting the outcome of infection of at least one of such viruses. The effect of this event was first observed in the XVIII century and it was first recorded even before virology was recognized as a distinct science from microbiology. Studies on virus interference were mostly done in the decades between 1930 and 1960 in viruses infecting bacteria and different vertebrates. The systems included experiments and later, more refined assays were done using tissue and cell cultures. Many viruses involved in interference are pathogenic to humans or to economically important animals. Thus the phenomenon may be relevant to medicine and to animal production due to the possibility to use it as alternative to chemical therapies against virus infections to reduce the severity of disease/mortality caused by a superinfecting virus. Virus interference is defined as the host resistance to a superinfection caused by a pathogenic virus causing obvious signs of disease and/or mortality due to the action of an interfering virus abrogating the replication of the former virus. Different degrees of inhibition of the superinfecting virus can occur. Due to the emergence of novel pathogenic viruses in recent years, virus interference has recently been revisited using different pathogens and hosts, including commercially important farmed aquatic species. Here, some highly pathogenic viruses affecting farmed crustaceans can be affected by interference with other viruses. This review presents data on the history of virus interference in hosts including bacteria and animals, with emphasis on the known cases of virus interference in crustacean hosts. Life Science Identifiers (LSIDs) [(Migula 1895) Castellani & Chalmers 1919] (Skuse 1894) (Linnaeus 1758): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:107387 (Burkenroad 1939): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:158334 (Linnaeus 1758): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:107381 (De Man 1879): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:220137 (Boone 1931): urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C30A0A50-E309-4E24-851D-01CF94D97F23 (Fabricius 1798): urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:3DD50D8B-01C2-48A7-B80D-9D9DD2E6F7AD (Stimpson 1874): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:584982.
病毒干扰是指两种病毒在宿主内相互作用,影响至少其中一种病毒感染结果的现象。这种现象最早于 18 世纪被观察到,甚至在病毒学被认为是一门独立于微生物学的科学之前就已经被记录下来。20 世纪 30 年代至 60 年代期间,人们对病毒干扰进行了大量研究,涉及感染细菌和不同脊椎动物的病毒。这些系统包括实验,后来使用组织和细胞培养进行了更精细的检测。许多参与干扰的病毒对人类或经济上重要的动物具有致病性。因此,由于可以利用这种现象作为针对病毒感染的化学疗法的替代方法来减轻由继发感染病毒引起的疾病/死亡率,因此该现象可能与医学和动物生产有关。病毒干扰被定义为宿主对由引起明显疾病和/或死亡率的致病性病毒引起的继发感染的抗性,继发感染病毒的干扰作用可阻断前一种病毒的复制。继发感染病毒的抑制程度可能不同。由于近年来新出现了具有致病性的新型病毒,因此最近使用不同的病原体和宿主重新研究了病毒干扰,包括具有商业重要性的养殖水生动物。在此,一些对养殖甲壳类动物具有高致病性的病毒可能会受到其他病毒的干扰。本文综述了包括细菌和动物在内的宿主中病毒干扰的历史,重点介绍了甲壳类动物宿主中已知的病毒干扰病例。生命科学标识符 (LSID) [(Migula 1895) Castellani & Chalmers 1919] (Skuse 1894) (Linnaeus 1758): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:107387 (Burkenroad 1939): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:158334 (Linnaeus 1758): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:107381 (De Man 1879): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:220137 (Boone 1931): urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C30A0A50-E309-4E24-851D-01CF94D97F23 (Fabricius 1798): urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:3DD50D8B-01C2-48A7-B80D-9D9DD2E6F7AD (Stimpson 1874): urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:584982.