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  lüll Rubella virus replication and links to teratogenicity Lee JY; Bowden DSClin Microbiol Rev  2000[Oct]; 13 (4): 571-87Rubella virus (RV) is the causative agent of the disease known more popularly as  German measles. Rubella is predominantly a childhood disease and is endemic  throughout the world. Natural infections of rubella occur only in humans and are  generally mild. Complications of rubella infection, most commonly polyarthralgia  in adult women, do exist; occasionally more serious sequelae occur. However, the  primary public health concern of RV infection is its teratogenicity. RV infection  of women during the first trimester of pregnancy can induce a spectrum of  congenital defects in the newborn, known as congenital rubella syndrome (CRS).  The development of vaccines and implementation of vaccination strategies have  substantially reduced the incidence of disease and in turn of CRS in developed  countries. The pathway whereby RV infection leads to teratogenesis has not been  elucidated, but the cytopathology in infected fetal tissues suggests necrosis  and/or apoptosis as well as inhibition of cell division of critical precursor  cells involved in organogenesis. In cell culture, a number of unusual features of  RV replication have been observed, including mitochondrial abnormalities, and  disruption of the cytoskeleton; these manifestations are most probably linked and  play some role in RV teratogenesis. Further understanding of the mechanism of RV  teratogenesis will be brought about by the investigation of RV replication and  virus-host interactions.|Adult[MESH]|Apoptosis[MESH]|Cell Division[MESH]|Embryonic and Fetal Development[MESH]|Female[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Pregnancy[MESH]|Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/*virology[MESH]|Rubella Syndrome, Congenital/pathology/physiopathology/*virology[MESH]|Rubella virus/*pathogenicity/*physiology[MESH]|Rubella/virology[MESH]|Viral Proteins/metabolism[MESH]|Virus Replication[MESH] |