Viruses (Nov 2015)

Recent Advances in BLV Research

  • Pierre-Yves Barez,
  • Alix de Brogniez,
  • Alexandre Carpentier,
  • Hélène Gazon,
  • Nicolas Gillet,
  • Gerónimo Gutiérrez,
  • Malik Hamaidia,
  • Jean-Rock Jacques,
  • Srikanth Perike,
  • Sathya Neelature Sriramareddy,
  • Nathalie Renotte,
  • Bernard Staumont,
  • Michal Reichert,
  • Karina Trono,
  • Luc Willems

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v7112929
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 11
pp. 6080 – 6088

Abstract

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Different animal models have been proposed to investigate the mechanisms of Human T-lymphotropic Virus (HTLV)-induced pathogenesis: rats, transgenic and NOD-SCID/γcnull (NOG) mice, rabbits, squirrel monkeys, baboons and macaques. These systems indeed provide useful information but have intrinsic limitations such as lack of disease relevance, species specificity or inadequate immune response. Another strategy based on a comparative virology approach is to characterize a related pathogen and to speculate on possible shared mechanisms. In this perspective, bovine leukemia virus (BLV), another member of the deltaretrovirus genus, is evolutionary related to HTLV-1. BLV induces lymphoproliferative disorders in ruminants providing useful information on the mechanisms of viral persistence, genetic determinants of pathogenesis and potential novel therapies.

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