“…The muscle isoforms exhibit tissue specific expression, while the band g-cytoplasmic actins (CYA) are the most abundant in nonmuscle cells (Rubenstein, 1990) and often exist in 2:1 ratio in epithelial cell lines like HeLa and chicken embryo fibroblasts (Khaitlina, 2007), the cell types commonly used to study VACV in vitro and cell types commonly targeted by orthopoxviruses during pathogenesis (Johnston and McFadden, 2004;McFadden, 2005;Smith and Kotwal, 2002;Werden, Rahman, & McFadden, 2008). Despite their surprisingly similar sequence homologies [only differing by four amino acids; (Vandekerckhove and Weber, 1978a)], recent reports have revealed that band g-CYA have different functions and display distinct subcellular localization patterns (Artman, Dormoy-Raclet, von Roretz, & Gallouzi, 2014;Dugina, Zwaenepoel, Gabbiani, Clement, & Chaponnier, 2009;Joseph, Srivastava, & Pfister, 2014;Pasquier, Tuset, Sinnappan, Carnell, Macmillan, & Kavallaris, 2015). b-actin is predominantly found in basal areas of the cell, cell-cell contacts and stress fibres, while g-CYA is more apically abundant, and concentrated at peripheral structures such as lamellipodia and the leading edge of motile cells (Chaponnier and Gabbiani, 2004;Dugina et al, 2009].…”