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Myxomatosis in Australia and Europe: A model for emerging infectious diseases

Antiviral Research, 2012
Myxoma virus is a poxvirus naturally found in two American leporid (rabbit) species (Sylvilagus brasiliensis and Sylvilagus bachmani) in which it causes an innocuous localised cutaneous fibroma. However, in European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) the same virus causes the lethal disseminated disease myxomatosis.
openaire   +2 more sources

Contact transmission of infectious myxomatosis of the rabbit, Oryctolagus cuniculus (L.)

CSIRO Wildlife Research, 1958
Various factors possibly involved in the contact transmission of infectious myxomatosis of rabbits have been studied. The louse Haemodipsus ventricosus (Denny) and the mite Cheyletiella parasitivorax (Megnin) were shown to be capable of transmitting the disease, though their efficiency as vectors must be considered of a low order.
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THE VIRUS OF INFECTIOUS MYXOMATOSIS OF RABBITS ON THE CHORIOALLANTOIC MEMBRANE OF THE DEVELOPING EGG

Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science, 1937
THE VIRUS OF INFECTIOUS MYXOMATOSIS OF RABBITS ON THE CHORIOALLANTOIC MEMBRANE OF THE DEVELOPING EGG *
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THE ROUTE OF TRANSMISSION OF THE VIRUS OF INFECTIOUS MYXOMATOSIS OF RABBITS TO THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM

Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science, 1941
THE ROUTE OF TRANSMISSION OF THE VIRUS OF INFECTIOUS MYXOMATOSIS OF RABBITS TO THE CENTRAL NERVOUS ...
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INFECTIOUS MYXOMATOSIS OF RABBITS : STUDIES OF A SOLUBLE ANTIGEN ASSOCIATED WITH THE DISEASE.

The Journal of experimental medicine, 2010
The soluble antigen of myxoma is a heat-labile protein which has an isoelectric point near pH 4.5 and is precipitated from half saturated solutions of ammonium sulfate. It can be partially purified by methods of differential precipitation based on variations in the pH and electrolyte concentration.
T M, Rivers, S M, Ward, J E, Smadel
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INFECTIOUS MYXOMATOSIS OF RABBITS : II. DEMONSTRATION OF A SECOND SOLUBLE ANTIGEN ASSOCIATED WITH THE DISEASE.

The Journal of experimental medicine, 2010
A second soluble antigen, separable from the virus, occurs in extracts of infected skin and in the serum of rabbits acutely ill with infectious myxomatosis. Like the first antigen (A), the second (B) is heat labile and has certain characteristics of a globulin.
J E, Smadel, S M, Ward, T M, Rivers
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The Transmissibility of Infectious Myxomatosis

Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1945
R. B. Houlihan, G. M. Lawson
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mRNA vaccines for infectious diseases: principles, delivery and clinical translation

Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, 2021
Namit Chaudhary   +2 more
exaly  

INFECTIOUS MYXOMATOSIS OF RABBITS : PREPARATION OF ELEMENTARY BODIES AND STUDIES OF SEROLOGICALLY ACTIVE MATERIALS ASSOCIATED WITH THE DISEASE.

The Journal of experimental medicine, 2010
From the results of the experiments described in this paper it is obvious that large amounts of elementary bodies of myxoma can be obtained in a relatively pure state by means of the methods used. Furthermore, it is evident that infectious myxomatosis is a viral disease in which elementary bodies of the same order of magnitude as vaccinal elementary ...
T M, Rivers, S M, Ward
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