Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3421829 Trends in Microbiology 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Although respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a major human respiratory pathogen, our knowledge of how it causes disease in humans is limited. Airway epithelial cells are the primary targets of RSV infection in vivo, so the generation and exploitation of RSV infection models based on morphologically and physiologically authentic well-differentiated primary human airway epithelial cells cultured at an air–liquid interface (WD-PAECs) provide timely developments that will help to bridge this gap. Here we review the interaction of RSV with WD-PAEC cultures, the authenticity of the RSV–WD-PAEC models relative to RSV infection of human airway epithelium in vivo, and future directions for their exploitation in our quest to understand RSV pathogenesis in humans.

► RSV is a major respiratory pathogen in infants that infects airway epithelium. ► WD-PAEC cultures are authentic surrogates of human airway epithelium. ► RSV infection of WD-PAECs reproduces several hallmarks of RSV infection in infants. ► Studying RSV–WD-PAEC interactions will illuminate novel therapeutic strategies.

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