Cedar virus, officially Cedar henipavirus, is a henipavirus known to be harboured by Pteropus spp. Infectious virus was isolated from the urine of a mixed Pteropus alecto and P. poliocephalus in Queensland, Australia in 2009. Unlike the Nipah and Hendra virus, Cedar virus infection does not lead to obvious disease in vivo. Infected animals mounted effective immune responses and seroconverted in challenge studies.[1]

Cedar henipavirus
Virus classification Edit this classification
(unranked): Virus
Realm: Riboviria
Kingdom: Orthornavirae
Phylum: Negarnaviricota
Class: Monjiviricetes
Order: Mononegavirales
Family: Paramyxoviridae
Genus: Henipavirus
Species:
Cedar henipavirus

Unlike Hendra and Nipah, which attach to Ephrin B2 or B3, Cedar virus can also attach to Ephrin B1. This may be responsible for lack of observed pathogenicity or development of severe meningoencephalitis and spinal inflammation. However the atypical course of disease observed in Cedar virus infection, as opposed to the characteristic immunopathology among the prototypic Nipah-Hendra complex, may be related to Cedar virus' reduced ability to access the key immunomodulatory gene products, V, W, and C, embedded in the henipavirus phosphoprotein P.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Marsh, Glenn A.; de Jong, Carol; Barr, Jennifer A.; Tachedjian, Mary; Smith, Craig; Middleton, Deborah; Yu, Meng; Todd, Shawn; Foord, Adam J.; Haring, Volker; Payne, Jean; Robinson, Rachel; Broz, Ivano; Crameri, Gary; Field, Hume E.; Wang, Lin-Fa (2 August 2012). "Cedar Virus: A Novel Henipavirus Isolated from Australian Bats". PLOS Pathogens. 8 (8): e1002836. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002836. PMC 3410871. PMID 22879820.
  2. ^ Pryce, Rhys; Azarm, Kristopher; Rissanen, Ilona; Harlos, Karl; Bowden, Thomas A.; Lee, Benhur (2020). "A key region of molecular specificity orchestrates unique ephrin-B1 utilization by Cedar virus". Life Science Alliance. 3 (1): e201900578. doi:10.26508/lsa.201900578. ISSN 2575-1077. PMC 6925387. PMID 31862858.
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