Title
Molecular foundations of competitive exclusion during coinfection of respiratory viruses: about COVID-19
Other title
Fundamentos moleculares de la exclusión competitiva durante la coinfección de virus respiratorios: a propósito del COVID-19
Date Issued
01 January 2021
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Suclupe-Campos D.O.
Publisher(s)
Editorial Ciencias Medicas
Abstract
Introduction: The idea of competitive exclusion is undisputed when it comes to animals and bacteria trying to occupy the same ecological niche, but its application to viral coinfection is not so simple to interpret. Viral interference is a phenomenon in which one virus competitively suppresses the replication of other co-infecting viruses and is the most common outcome of viral co-infections. Objective: To better understand the behavior of concomitant respiratory infections in community outbreak settings and individually in hospital settings and individuals with comorbidities. Methods: A search for information was performed in the MEDLINE / PubMed, SciELO and LILACS databases. Articles published in the preprint repository medRxiv and reports from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were also considered. Using the Mendeley reference manager, duplicates and those that did not fit the study objective were eliminated, selecting 48 articles for the review. Analysis and synthesis of information: Evidence supporting viral competitive exclusion between related viruses sharing susceptible and permissive cells was found in the scientific literature. Conclusion: Competitive exclusion prevents two viruses that share similar transmission routes and the same target organ from infecting not only at the same time, but also from spreading successfully. Therefore, syndemia produced by viruses sharing these characteristics could be an unlikely event.
Volume
37
Language
Spanish
OCDE Knowledge area
Sistema respiratorio
Virología
Epidemiología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85131263934
Source
Revista Cubana de Hematologia, Inmunologia y Hemoterapia
ISSN of the container
08640289
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus