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Cabral Rafael Ferracini - - 2009
ABSTRACT: Approximately 90% to 95% of Kaposi sarcoma cases occur in human immunodeficiency virus - infected homosexual and bisexual men. Pulmonary Kaposi sarcoma is uncommon in women, and rarely considered as a potential cause of diffuse lung disease in women with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. The disease is usually mistaken clinically ...
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Danovaro Roberto - - 2008
Viruses are the most abundant biological organisms of the world's oceans. Viral infections are a substantial source of mortality in a range of organisms-including autotrophic and heterotrophic plankton-but their impact on the deep ocean and benthic biosphere is completely unknown. Here we report that viral production in deep-sea benthic ecosystems ...
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Utsunomiya Hideto - - 2008
We examined the inhibitory effect of cationic polyrotaxanes, which consist of alpha-cyclodextrins threaded on a poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) chain, on the activity of the intestinal carnitine/organic cation transporter, OCTN2, in OCTN2 gene-transfected HEK293/PDZK1 cells. The cationic polyrotaxanes effectively inhibited the OCTN2-mediated carnitine transport. Polyrotaxanes with a longer PEG chain exhibited ...
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Kung Mei-Ping - - 2008
Recent studies on gene expression of beta-cell mass (BCM) in the pancreas showed that vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) is highly expressed in the BCM (mainly in the islets of Langerhans). Imaging pancreatic BCM may provide an important tool for understanding the relationship between loss of insulin-secreting beta-cells and onset ...
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Schlicht Markus - - 2008
SUMMARY: The C(18) ketone (5E,7E)-6-methyl-8-(2,6,6-trimethylcyclohex-1-enyl)octa-5,7-dien-2-one (D'orenone) has been postulated to be an early cleavage product of beta-carotene en route to trisporic acids; these act as morphogenetic factors during the sexual reproduction of zygomycetes. Here we report that D'orenone blocks the highly polarized tip growth of root hairs, causing tip growth ...
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Köster-Patzlaff Christiane - - 2008
Neonatal Borna Disease Virus (BDV) infection of the Lewis rat brain, leads to Purkinje cell degeneration, in association with astroglial activation. Since astroglial gap junctions (GJ) are known to influence neuronal degeneration, we investigated BDV dependent changes in astroglial GJ connexins (Cx) Cx43, and Cx30 in the Lewis rat cerebellum, ...
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McClure Lydia V - - 2008
Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virus (KSHV), the causative agent of several neoplasms, has recently been shown to encode 12 microRNAs. mir-155 is a host-encoded microRNA associated with lymphomagenesis. Two new papers provide strong evidence that a KSHV-encoded microRNA and mir-155 share a common set of mRNA targets and binding sites, implying ...
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Svoboda Jan - - 2008
This chapter provides a personal insight into the scientific and social atmosphere in former Czechoslovakia. It covers the period of the rise of Hasek's immunologic school and application of immunologic tolerance to Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) heterotransmission. These approaches permitted establishment of a new model of mammalian cells transformed by ...
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Girelli C M - - 2009
Colorectal Kaposi's sarcoma, a human herpes virus-8 associated mesenchymal tumour, is exceedingly rare in human immunodeficiency virus-negative subjects and almost always reported in association with severe, refractory, inflammatory bowel disease. In this paper we report a case--the second from Italy--of a colorectal Kaposi's sarcoma in a human immunodeficiency virus-negative, heterosexual ...
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Köster-Patzlaff Christiane - - 2007
Neonatal Borna Disease Virus (BDV) infection of the Lewis rat brain leads to dentate gyrus (DG) degeneration, underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Since astroglial gap junction (GJ) coupling is known to influence neurodegenerative processes, the question arose whether persistent BDV infection influences astroglial connexins (Cx) Cx43 and Cx30 in ...
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Rovnak Joel - - 2007
Walleye dermal sarcoma virus (WDSV) is a complex retrovirus associated with dermal sarcomas in walleye fish. Virus expression is tightly regulated and limited to accessory gene transcripts throughout tumour development. During tumour regression, this regulation is lost and the replication of virus is greatly enhanced. Cultured walleye fibroblasts infected in ...
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Lee Sangmi - - 2007
Our functional mapping study of murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV-68, or gammaHV-68) revealed that a mutant harboring a transposon at the ORF49 locus (ORF49(null)) evidenced a highly attenuated in vitro growth. ORF49 resides adjacent to and in an opposite direction from RTA, the primary switch of the gammaherpesvirus life cycle. A ...
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Brzezinski Margaret - - 2007
BACKGROUND: Towards gene therapy treatment of patients with neutropenia, characterized by neutrophil counts < 500 cells/microl, we investigated the ability of lentivirus vectors to provide sustained granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) delivery and to permit transgene expression from a second virus administration in a preclinical rat model. METHODS: Rats were injected ...
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Mastrangelo D - - 2007
PURPOSE: We investigated whether urothelium modulates isolated rat ureter contractions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Segments of intact and urothelium-free ureters were placed in organ baths at 37C. The contractile effects of KCl and endogenous ureteral contractile agents were recorded in the absence and presence of the cyclooxygenase inhibitors indomethacin (1 microM) ...
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Shevchuk Nikolai A - - 2007
To probe the functions of membrane gangliosides, the availability of ganglioside-depleted cells would be a valuable resource. To attempt to identify a useful genetic model of ganglioside depletion, we assessed ganglioside metabolism in murine GM3 synthase (GM3S)-/- knockout primary embryonic fibroblasts (MEF), because normal fibroblast gangliosides (GM3, GM2, GM1, and ...
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Alonso Pedro E - - 2008
The triggering cause of keloid formation on a healing wound remains an enigma. In fact, the hypotheses put forward so far to explain this phenomenon seem inconsistent with some clinical features of the disease. The recently established bonds between infectious agents and some pathologies of unknown origin such as peptic ...
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Wolff E C - - 2007
A naturally occurring unusual amino acid, hypusine [N (epsilon)-(4-amino-2-hydroxybutyl)-lysine] is a component of a single cellular protein, eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF5A). It is a modified lysine with structural contribution from the polyamine spermidine. Hypusine is formed in a novel posttranslational modification that involves two enzymes, deoxyhypusine synthase (DHS) ...
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Faber Milosz - - 2007
The nonpathogenic phenotype of the live rabies virus (RV) vaccine SPBNGAN is determined by an Arg-->Glu exchange at position 333 in the glycoprotein, designated GAN. We recently showed that after several passages of SPBNGAN in mice, an Asn-->Lys mutation arose at position 194 of GAN, resulting in GAK, which was ...
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Landazuri Natalia - - 2007
We have previously shown that complexes of Polybrene (PB), chondroitin sulfate C (CSC), and retrovirus transduce cells more efficiently than uncomplexed virus because the complexes are large and sediment, reaching the cells more rapidly than by diffusion. Transduction reaches a peak at equal weight concentrations of CSC and PB and ...
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Girard Céline - - 2007
Human herpes virus 8 infection is the primary and necessary factor in the development of Kaposi's sarcoma, but is not sufficient per se to trigger the onset of the disease. In order to search for virological cofactors associated with the occurrence of the disease, we investigated the prevalence of active ...
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Carr J M - - 2006
Reverse transcription (RTn) in HIV-infected cells occurs in a nucleoprotein complex termed the reverse transcription complex (RTC). RTCs containing RT activity and integrase (IN) were shown to be heterogeneous in size and density on sucrose velocity and equilibrium gradients. WT and Vif-deficient (Deltavif) RTCs produced by infection with virus from ...
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Bourguignon Saulo C - - 2006
We describe some biological characteristics of the Trypanosoma cruzi intermediate form derived from the transformation of epimastigotes to trypomastigotes obtained from cultivation in modified liver infusion tryptose (LIT) medium. The ultrastructural analysis of the intermediate forms in this medium showed the enlargement of the kinetoplast located adjacent to the flagellate ...
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Rao Satish
Kaposi′s sarcoma is described as cutaneous and extracutaneous neoplasm predominantly affecting older individuals. Though earlier uncommon and endemic to certain African areas, its incidence is on a rise due to infections with human immunodeficiency virus and also due to transplant-associated immunosuppression. Further, certain benign conditions like Pseudo Kaposi′s sarcoma, certain ...
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You Jin-Oh - - 2006
Developing methods to label viruses with fluorescent moieties has its merits in elucidating viral infection mechanisms and exploring novel antiviral therapeutics. Fluorescent quantum dots (QDs), an emerging probe for biological imaging and medical diagnostics, were employed in this study to tag retrovirus encoding enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) genes. Electrostatic ...
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Masala Maria Vittoria - - 2005
BACKGROUND: The incidence of classic Kaposi's sarcoma (CKS) in northern Sardinia is one of the highest in the world. METHODS: Sixty-two patients with CKS were typed for class I and class II antigens. All patients had been born and were living in northern Sardinia. RESULTS: In the Sardinian patients, we ...
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Chang Kevin W - - 2005
Previous attempts to extend the host range of the avian sarcoma/leukosis virus (ASLV)-based RCASBP vectors produced two viral vectors, RCASBP M2C (4070A) and RCASBP M2C (797-8), which replicate using the amphotropic murine leukemia virus 4070A Env protein (2). Both viruses were adapted to replicate efficiently in the avian cell line ...
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Curtis Theodore H - - 2005
A 34-year-old man presented to the ophthalmology clinic because of an enlarging mass of the left bulbar conjunctiva, found to be Kaposi sarcoma by histologic examination. The patient had no prior diagnosis of human immunodeficiency virus infection, making this one of only two descriptions in the literature of conjunctival Kaposi ...
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Greger James G - - 2005
The cellular protein Daxx was identified as an interactor with avian sarcoma virus (ASV) integrase (IN) in a yeast two-hybrid screen. After infection, Daxx-IN interactions were detected by coimmunoprecipitation. An association between Daxx and viral DNA, likely mediated by IN, was also detected by chromatin immunoprecipitation. Daxx was not required ...
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Holmfeldt Per - - 2005
MCAK, a member of the kinesin-13 family, is a microtubule (MT) depolymerase that is necessary to ensure proper kinetochore MT attachment during spindle formation. Regulation of MCAK activity and localization is controlled in part by Aurora B kinase at the centromere. Here we analyzed human cells depleted of the ubiquitous ...
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Minami Kazuhisa - - 2005
The effect of the simultaneous use of 0.025% levocabastine hydrochloride eye drops (levocabastine) and 0.1% pemirolast potassium ophthalmic solution (pemirolast) on experimental allergic conjunctivitis in rats was investigated. Levocabastine and pemirolast significantly inhibited allergic conjunctivitis compared with the control group when separately administered. In addition, the simultaneous use of both ...
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Sakagami Junichi - - 2005
Kaposi's sarcoma is an uncommon neoplasm that occasionally involves the gastrointestinal tract in immunosuppressed individuals. Infection with human herpes virus 8 is known to be necessary for developing all forms of Kaposi's sarcoma. We report a renal transplant recipient who developed visceral Kaposi's sarcoma 18 months after the transplantation. In ...
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Fukuda Mitsunori - - 2005
Slp4-a/granuphilin-a is a member of the synaptotagmin-like protein (Slp) family and consists of an N-terminal Slp homology domain (SHD) and C-terminal tandem C2 domains. Slp4-a is specifically localized on secretory granules in some endocrine and exocrine cells through its SHD, and it attenuates Ca(2+)-dependent dense-core vesicle (DCV) exocytosis when transiently ...
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Martin G Steven - - 2004
More than a quarter of a century has elapsed since the identification of the c-src proto-oncogene. During that period, we have learned that cancer arises as the result of mutations in proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, and we are now seeing the first fruits of these discoveries, in the form ...
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Greger James G - - 2004
Recent studies have demonstrated that avian sarcoma virus (ASV) can transduce cycle-arrested cells. Here, we have assessed quantitatively the transduction efficiency of an ASV vector in naturally arrested mouse hippocampal neurons. This efficiency was determined by comparing the number of transduced cells after infection of differentiated neurons versus dividing progenitor ...
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Patel Rajiv M - - 2004
Kaposi sarcoma is a low-grade vascular neoplasm that has been shown by molecular analysis to uniformly express the latent nuclear antigen-1 of human herpes virus 8. Differentiating Kaposi sarcoma from other benign or malignant vascular tumors, as well as other nonvascular spindle cell soft-tissue neoplasms, can be challenging. Thus, detection ...
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Davis Howard E - - 2004
The specific mechanisms of charged polymer modulation of retrovirus transduction were analyzed by characterizing their effects on virus transport and adsorption. From a standard colloidal perspective two mechanisms, charge shielding and virus aggregation, can potentially account for the experimentally observed changes in adsorption behavior and biophysical parameters due to charged ...
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Somia Nikunj - - 2004
Viruses have evolved to deliver their genetic cargo to cells and, due to the pathogenicity of some viruses, this process has been the subject of a great deal of study. In this respect, retroviruses came to the fore in the early 1900s with the demonstration by Ellermann and Bang and ...
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Botha J - - 2004
The Cynodontia are considered to be particularly significant as their remains document the reptile-to-mammal transition during the Permian and Triassic periods. Studies examining cynodont morphology and anatomy have shown that these animals acquired increasingly mammal-like characteristics during their evolution. In this study, we use Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy to assess ...
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Noy Ariela - - 2003
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Knowledge of the pathophysiology of Kaposi sarcoma continues to expand and influence our therapeutic approaches. This review summarizes developments within the last 18 to 24 months. RECENT FINDINGS: Pieces of the puzzle as they relate to viral factors-both human herpes virus 8 (HHV-8) and human immunodeficiency virus ...
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Draper Bradley K - - 2003
Epiregulin (EPR) is a broad specificity EGF family member that activates ErbB1 and ErbB4 homodimers and all possible heterodimeric ErbB complexes. We have previously shown that topical EPR enhances the repair of murine excisional wounds. The purpose of this study was to determine whether EPR was more effective than EGF ...
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Nudson Wade A - - 2003
Walleye dermal sarcomas are associated with the presence of a complex retrovirus, walleye dermal sarcoma virus (WDSV). These sarcomas develop and regress seasonally in naturally infected fish. In addition to gag, pol and env, WDSV contains three open reading frames (ORFs), designated orf a, orf b and orf c. orf ...
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Frew Ian J - - 2002
Overexpression studies have suggested that Siah1 proteins may act as effectors of p53-mediated cellular responses and as regulators of mitotic progression. We have tested these hypotheses using Siah gene knockout mice. Siah1a and Siah1b were not induced by activation of endogenous p53 in tissues, primary murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) or ...
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Bao Kogan K - - 2003
Retroviral integrase, one of only three enzymes encoded by the virus, catalyzes the essential step of inserting a DNA copy of the viral genome into the host during infection. Using the avian sarcoma virus integrase, we demonstrate that the enzyme functions as a tetramer. In presteady-state active site titrations, four ...
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Abrusán György - - 2003
The responses of invertebrate predators to changes in the morphology of their prey, and especially the responses for induced defences, are largely unexplored, compared with the vast amount of data on predator-induced defences. This study demonstrates that the size of the feeding basket, the anatomical structure used to capture prey ...
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Temin, Howard M.
By the use of new methods for assaying in vitro Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) and Rous sarcoma cells and for isolating the progeny of single particles of RSV, it has been found that the morphology of Rous sarcoma cells is partially controlled by genetic factors in the virus. The influence ...
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Chandan Kiran - - 2002
A 39 year old married heterosexual male presented with extensive purpuric macules, papules, and lichenoid plaques scattered over his skin and mucocutaneous surfaces for one year. The lesions were larger in both his groins, and were associated with lymphedema of his penis and scrotum. His serology for the HIV-1 virus ...
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Liu Jita - - 2002
Suspensions of nitrofurantoin (NTF) microparticles for controlled release were investigated in this study. The microparticles were enteric coated with various combinations of the two polymers, cellulose acetate phthalate/cellulose acetate butyrate (CAP/CAB) by a modified solvent evaporation method. Ratios of NTF to the two polymers (NTF/CAP/CAB) ranged from 1.0:1.6:0.4,1.0:1.0:1.0,1.0: 0.4:1.6 to ...
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Pletnikov Mikhail V - - 2002
The gene-environment interplay is thought to determine variability in clinical conditions and responses to therapy in human neurodevelopmental disorders. Studying abnormal brain and behavior development in inbred strains of rodents can help in the identification of the complex pathogenic mechanisms of the host-environment interaction. This paper is the second one ...
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Panda Koustubh - - 2002
Homodimer formation activates all nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs). It involves the interaction between two oxygenase domains (NOSoxy) that each bind heme and (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) and catalyze NO synthesis from L-Arg. Here we compared three NOSoxy isozymes regarding dimer strength, interface composition, and the ability of L-Arg and H4B to stabilize the ...
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Barillari Giovanni - - 2002
The Tat protein of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 is a transactivator of viral gene expression that is required for virus replication and spread. Moreover, Tat is released by acutely HIV-infected cells via a leaderless secretory pathway and in a biologically active form that exerts effects on both HIV-infected ...
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