Abstract
Lipid rafts are defined as specialized, dynamic microdomains that can be found in plasma membrane, and they are enriched with cholesterol and sphingolipids. Since lipid rafts first debut in the mid 1990s, their existence, function and biological relevance have been a subject of intense scrutiny within the scientific community. Throughout this debate, we have learned a great deal regarding how cargos (both pathogens and cellular factors) are transported into and out of the cell through raft-dependent or raft-independent pathways. It is now apparent that a number of toxins, bacterial-, and viral-pathogens are able to exploit cholesterol and/or lipid rafts to gain a foot hold in their target hosts. The objective of this review is to describe our current appreciation on how selected pathogens utilise cholesterol and/or lipid rafts to support their propagation and to speculate on how some of these observations can be explored for the development of novel strategies that target plasma membrane lipids to control the spread of these viral- and bacterial-pathogens.
Keywords: lipid rafts, virus, bacteria, antiviral, microbicides
Current Drug Targets
Title: Lipid Membrane; A Novel Target for Viral and Bacterial Pathogens
Volume: 7 Issue: 12
Author(s): David J. Hawkes and Johnson Mak
Affiliation:
Keywords: lipid rafts, virus, bacteria, antiviral, microbicides
Abstract: Lipid rafts are defined as specialized, dynamic microdomains that can be found in plasma membrane, and they are enriched with cholesterol and sphingolipids. Since lipid rafts first debut in the mid 1990s, their existence, function and biological relevance have been a subject of intense scrutiny within the scientific community. Throughout this debate, we have learned a great deal regarding how cargos (both pathogens and cellular factors) are transported into and out of the cell through raft-dependent or raft-independent pathways. It is now apparent that a number of toxins, bacterial-, and viral-pathogens are able to exploit cholesterol and/or lipid rafts to gain a foot hold in their target hosts. The objective of this review is to describe our current appreciation on how selected pathogens utilise cholesterol and/or lipid rafts to support their propagation and to speculate on how some of these observations can be explored for the development of novel strategies that target plasma membrane lipids to control the spread of these viral- and bacterial-pathogens.
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Cite this article as:
Hawkes J. David and Mak Johnson, Lipid Membrane; A Novel Target for Viral and Bacterial Pathogens, Current Drug Targets 2006; 7 (12) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138945006779025455
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138945006779025455 |
Print ISSN 1389-4501 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1873-5592 |
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