Subtype of influenza A H3N2, but not H1N1, needs transporter protein Rab11B to enter host cells
Influenza virus, shown here coloured red inside lung cells, infects these and other epithelial cells of the respiratory tract to create all the unpleasant symptoms we associate with a bout of flu. Recently, scientists who were investigating how the virus is replicated and mobilised within these cells made a surprising discovery. They inhibited the activity of a particular vesicle [a membrane-coated organelle for moving molecules in and out of cells] trafficking protein, called Rab11B, to see the effect on viral protein transport and found that one of the viral strains they were studying (H3N2) was blocked from entering the cells altogether. The other (H1N1) was not. Until these experiments, it had been presumed that H3N2 and H1N1 entered cells by the same mechanism. While the precise role of Rab11B in H3N2 cellular entry remains to be determined, the findings could lead to new ways for preventing and curtailing infections with that particular strain.
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