Killer cell proteases can target viral immediate-early proteins to control human cytomegalovirus infection in a noncytotoxic manner

Volume: 16, Issue: 4, Pages: e1008426 - e1008426
Published: Apr 13, 2020
Abstract
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is the most frequent viral cause of congenital defects and can trigger devastating disease in immune-suppressed patients. Cytotoxic lymphocytes (CD8+ T cells and NK cells) control HCMV infection by releasing interferon-γ and five granzymes (GrA, GrB, GrH, GrK, GrM), which are believed to kill infected host cells through cleavage of intracellular death substrates. However, it has recently been demonstrated that the in...
Paper Details
Title
Killer cell proteases can target viral immediate-early proteins to control human cytomegalovirus infection in a noncytotoxic manner
Published Date
Apr 13, 2020
Volume
16
Issue
4
Pages
e1008426 - e1008426
Citation AnalysisPro
  • Scinapse’s Top 10 Citation Journals & Affiliations graph reveals the quality and authenticity of citations received by a paper.
  • Discover whether citations have been inflated due to self-citations, or if citations include institutional bias.