نتایج جستجو برای: pseudorabies virus

تعداد نتایج: 397229  

Journal: :Preventive veterinary medicine 2003
Tony L Goldberg

I used phylogenetic analyses to reconstruct patterns of directional interspecific transmission during a pseudorabies virus outbreak in Illinois, USA, in 1989. Isolates were recovered from five species: cattle, sheep, goats, pigs, and raccoons (Procyon lotor). I generated DNA sequences for 16 isolates of pseudorabies virus at the glycoprotein C gene, from which I constructed phylogenetic trees. ...

Journal: :Journal of virology 1987
B Lomniczi A Gielkens I Csobai T Ben-Porat

The genome of pseudorabies virus consists of two components, short (S) and long (L). Only the S component is bracketed by inverted repeats, and only the S component inverts itself relative to the L component, giving rise to two isomeric forms of the genome. An attenuated vaccine strain of pseudorabies virus (Norden), however, has a genome which is found in four isomeric forms (B. Lomniczi, M. L...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 2003
Erich Traub

Pseudorabies virus was cultivated in vitro in washed testicle tissue from immune guinea pigs, and evidence was thus procured which indicated that the testicle cells themselves had not become immune to pseudorabies. The rate of multiplication of the virus was considerably greater in control cultures with normal guinea pig testis than in cultures with immune testis. The reason for this fact may b...

2016
Xun Liang Leqiang Sun Teng Yu Yongfei Pan Dongdong Wang Xueying Hu Zhenfang Fu Qigai He Gang Cao

Virus evolves rapidly to escape vaccine-induced immunity, posing a desperate demand for efficient vaccine development biotechnologies. Here we present an express vaccine development strategy based on CRISPR/Cas9 and Cre/Lox system against re-emerging Pseudorabies virus, which caused the recent devastating swine pseudorabies outbreak in China. By CRISPR/Cas9 system, the virulent genes of the new...

Journal: :Journal of Korean Medical Science 2001
M. H. Ko M. Y. Oh H. S. Noh M. J. Cho Y. J. Lee B. H. Lee

The hippocampus is a central area of the memory-related neural system. Combined immunohistochemistry against choline acetyl transferase and retrograde transneuronal labelling of the pseudorabies virus were used to identify cholinergic neurons in the central nervous system projecting to the hippocampal formation of the rat. Five to ten microL of Bartha strain of pseudorabies virus were injected ...

Journal: :Journal of virology 1988
M van Zijl W Quint J Briaire T de Rover A Gielkens A Berns

The ability to manipulate the genomes of herpesviruses is of eminent importance for obtaining insight into gene function and regulation of gene expression of these complex viruses. Here we report the use of in vivo overlap recombination to generate pseudorabies virus mutants. Cotransfection of up to five overlapping cloned subgenomic fragments, which together constitute the entire genomic infor...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2013
Kerri Pedersen Sarah N Bevins John A Baroch James C Cumbee Shannon C Chandler Billy S Woodruff Troy T Bigelow Thomas J DeLiberto

Although pseudorabies virus can affect a wide range of mammalian and avian hosts, swine are the only natural hosts of the virus. The US commercial swine industry obtained pseudorabies-free status in 2004, which was important because of the economic value of domestic swine production; however, feral swine remain competent hosts and represent a constant threat for reintroducing the virus into the...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2008
M G Lyman D Curanovic A D Brideau L W Enquist

Pseudorabies virus encodes a membrane protein (Us9) that is essential for the axonal sorting of virus particles within neurons and anterograde spread in the mammalian nervous system. Enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged Us9 mimicked the trafficking properties of the wild-type protein in nonneuronal cells. We constructed a pseudorabies virus strain that expressed Us9-GFP and tested it...

Journal: :Journal of Experimental Medicine 1933

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 2003
Richard E. Shope

Pseudorabies virus, Iowa strain ("mad itch"), after passage through guinea pig brain, fails to produce infection in guinea pigs when injected subcutaneously unless enormous doses are employed. Such virus is still pathogenic for rabbits when given subcutaneously and for rabbits and guinea pigs intracerebrally. Comparison of the amounts of virus present in the brains of rabbits and guinea pigs fo...

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