نتایج جستجو برای: bovine leukaemia virus blv

تعداد نتایج: 475460  

Journal: :Journal of virology 1999
K Inabe M Nishizawa S Tajima K Ikuta Y Aida

The cytoplasmic domain of an envelope transmembrane glycoprotein (gp30) of bovine leukemia virus (BLV) has two overlapping copies of the (YXXL)2 motif. The N-terminal motif has been implicated in in vitro signal transduction pathways from the external to the intracellular compartment and is also involved in infection and maintenance of high viral loads in sheep that have been experimentally inf...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2002
Christophe Debacq Becca Asquith Pierre Kerkhofs Daniel Portetelle Arsène Burny Richard Kettmann Luc Willems

Lymphocyte homeostasis is the result of a critical balance between cell proliferation and death. Disruption of this subtle equilibrium can lead to the onset of leukemia, an increase in the number of lymphocytes being potentially due to both of these parameters. The relative importance of cell proliferation vs. apoptosis during pathogenesis induced by the primate T cell lymphotropic viruses and ...

2013
Carlos Javier Panei Shin-nosuke Takeshima Takashi Omori Tetsuo Nunoya William C Davis Hiroshi Ishizaki Kazuhiro Matoba Yoko Aida

BACKGROUND Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) is associated with enzootic bovine leukosis (EBL), which is the most common neoplastic disease of cattle. BLV infection may remain clinically silent at the aleukemic (AL) stage, cause persistent lymphocytosis (PL), or, more rarely, B cell lymphoma. BLV has been identified in B cells, CD2+ T cells, CD3+ T cells, CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, γ/δ T cells, mono...

Journal: :Journal of virology 1998
J Xiao G C Buehring

Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) is a member of the human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV)/BLV group of retroviruses. These viruses regulate their own transcription by producing Tax, a protein which activates the virus promoter region, the long terminal repeat (LTR). To explore the molecular mechanisms involved in the transactivation, we identified protein binding elements by in vivo footprinting and an...

Journal: :Journal of virology 1999
D Pyeon G A Splitter

Recently, particular cytokines have been identified to affect progression of a variety of diseases and retrovirus infections. Previously, we demonstrated that interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-12, and gamma interferon increased in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from animals with early disease and decreased in PBMCs from animals with late disease stages of bovine leukemia virus (BLV) infectio...

2017
Gertrude C Buehring HuaMin Shen Daniel A Schwartz James S Lawson

Bovine leukemia virus (BLV), a common virus of cattle globally, was believed for decades not to infect humans. More recent techniques (in situ PCR and DNA sequencing) enabled detection of BLV in human breast tissue, and determination of its significant association with breast cancer in a US population. Using similar techniques to study 96 Australian women, we report here detection of retrotrans...

Journal: :The Journal of dairy research 1998
J L D'Angelino M Garcia E H Birgel

Economic losses caused by enzootic bovine leukosis (EBL) have been of interest since World War II, when the neoplastic form of EBL increased dramatically in Europe. Olson (1974) and House et al. (1975) showed that animals with lymphosarcoma caused by the bovine leukosis virus (BLV) had reduced milk yields, a less efficient reproductive performance and high veterinary costs and mortality rates, ...

Journal: :Journal of virology 1996
M L Mirsky C A Olmstead Y Da H A Lewin

The bovine leukemia virus (BLV) is an oncogenic retrovirus that is associated with the development of persistent lymphocytosis (PL) and lymphoma in cattle. While B lymphocytes have been shown to be the primary cellular target of BLV, recent studies suggest that some T lymphocytes and monocytes may be infected by the virus. Because virally altered functions of monocytes and/or T cells could cont...

Journal: :Polish journal of veterinary sciences 2011
B Bojarojć-Nosowicz E Kaczmarczyk A Stachura M Kotkiewicz

The objective of this study was to describe and compare the genetic structure (TNF-alpha -position 824) of dairy cattle herds infected and not infected with the bovine leukemia virus (BLV). The results of the present study indicate that BLV-positive herds were characterized by similar genetic structure (TNF-alpha -824A/G). The genetic equilibrium in these herds was preserved, but a tendency to ...

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