“…For viruses replicating in the nucleus, a key step is to transfer the viral genome to the cytoplasm. For example, human immunodeficiency virus or influenza virus use the nuclear export machineries to transport their unpackaged genomes from the nucleus to the cytoplasm ( Boulo et al., 2007 ; Cullen, 2003 ), whereas AdVs, parvoviruses, or polyomaviruses package their genome into a protein capsid and induce the rupture of the NE ( Daniels et al., 2007 ; Greber, 2020 ; Majumder et al., 2018 ; Puvion-Dutilleul et al., 1998 ; Suzuki et al., 2010 ; Tollefson et al., 1996b ). Other capsids, for instance those from herpesviruses and baculoviruses, egress from the nucleus by engaging non-disruptive processes, including budding and fusion in the nuclear membranes ( Bigalke and Heldwein, 2016 ; Blissard and Theilmann, 2018 ; Wang et al., 2018 ; Zeev-Ben-Mordehai et al., 2015 ), although herpesviruses were also reported to rupture the NE, or dilatate nuclear pores ( Grimm et al., 2012 ; Klupp et al., 2011 ; Maric et al., 2014 ; Wild et al., 2019 ).…”