A Systemic Receptor Network Triggered by Human cytomegalovirus Entry
Anyou Wang, Hong Li

TL;DR
This study uses systems biology to map a complex, dynamic receptor network activated by human cytomegalovirus entry, revealing key modules and control elements involved in the process.
Contribution
It uncovers a comprehensive systemic receptor network triggered by HCMV entry, highlighting the roles of various functional modules and key control genes.
Findings
The receptor network involves diverse cellular components including receptors, signal transduction, and chromatin remodeling.
Modules for immune response and cell adhesion are specifically activated during early infection stages.
Key control genes like EGFR and SLC10A1 regulate the entire receptor network.
Abstract
Virus entry is a multistep process that triggers a variety of cellular pathways interconnecting into a complex network, yet the molecular complexity of this network remains largely unsolved. Here, by employing systems biology approach, we reveal a systemic virus-entry network initiated by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), a widespread opportunistic pathogen. This network contains all known interactions and functional modules (i.e. groups of proteins) coordinately responding to HCMV entry. The number of both genes and functional modules activated in this network dramatically declines shortly, within 25 min post-infection. While modules annotated as receptor system, ion transport, and immune response are continuously activated during the entire process of HCMV entry, those for cell adhesion and skeletal movement are specifically activated during viral early attachment, and those for immune…
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