id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-272579-aenuyht0 Emmett, Stevan R. The Cell Cycle and Virus Infection 2005 .txt text/plain 6456 388 60 A number of different viruses interact with the cell cycle in order to subvert host-cell function and increase the efficiency of virus replication; examples can be found from DNA, retro, and RNA viruses. The majority of studies have been conducted on DNA and retroviruses whose primary site of replication is the nucleus, but increasingly a number of researchers are demonstrating that RNA viruses, whose primary site of replication is normally the cytoplasm, also interfere with the cell cycle. Viral interference with the cell cycle can have a myriad of different effects to improve virus infection, for example to promote replication of viral DNA genomes, or to delay the cell cycle to allow sufficient time for RNA virus assembly. Increasingly we have found that proteomic approaches allow the rapid analysis of a whole plethora of cell cycle proteins that may be affected by virus infection. ./cache/cord-272579-aenuyht0.txt ./txt/cord-272579-aenuyht0.txt