“…Interestingly, some Ads of species D, including Ad8, Ad37, Ad19a [recently renamed Ad64 (2)], and the more recently sequenced Ad53, Ad54, and Ad56 (2,4,5), cause a distinct disease, epidemic keratoconjunctivitis (EKC) (6). Surprisingly, this specific pathogenesis in the eye contrasts with the rather ubiquitous receptor profile of EKC-causing Ads (7,8), and thus is likely linked to selective events occurring postattachment, such as differential triggering of innate and adaptive immune responses (3,9,10). Thus, differential immunomodulatory functions encoded in early transcription unit 3 (E3) may play an important role in disease (9,11).…”