Results 131 to 140 of about 15,096 (180)
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The induction of interferon by temperature-sensitive mutants of reovirus, UV-irradiated reovirus, and subviral reovirus particles

Virology, 1973
Abstract The ability of temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of reovirus, UV-irradiated reovirus, and subviral particles of reovirus to induce interferon in mouse L929 fibroblasts was investigated. The following results were obtained: 1. 1. Nine ts mutants belonging to six recombination groups induced about the same amount of interferon as wild ...
M H, Lai, W K, Joklik
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Evidence for phosphoproteins in reovirus

Virology, 1975
Abstract Reovirus type 3 was radioactively labeled by infecting L cells in the presence of 32 P 1 . Approximately 0.1% of the total radioactivity in the purified virions could be assigned to phosphoprotein. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the phenol-extracted proteins showed that the majority of the 32 P label co-electrophoresed with the μ ...
G, Krystal   +3 more
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Evidence for a glycoprotein in reovirus

Virology, 1976
Abstract Using both in vivo and in vitro labeling procedures, the presence of carbohydrate has been demonstrated in purified reovirions. Upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis this carbohydrate migrates with the medium size class of reovirus polypeptides.
G, Krystal, J, Perrault, A F, Graham
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Transcription of Reovirus RNA

1974
The diplornaviruses (1), so classified because they contain double-stranded RNA as their genetic material, are ubiquitous and infect bacteria (pseudomonad phage φ6), fungi (Penicillium and Aspergillus virus), insects (cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus), plants (rice dwarf virus, wound tumor virus), birds (avian reovirus), and mammals (blue tongue virus ...
A K, Banerjee   +3 more
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Reovirus Structure and Morphogenesis

2006
Assembly of a mature infectious virion from component parts is one of the last steps in the replicative cycle of most viruses. Recent advances in delineating aspects of this process for the mammalian orthoreoviruses (MRV), nonenveloped viruses composed of a genome of ten segments of double-stranded RNA enclosed in two concentric icosahedral protein ...
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Pathogenesis of Reovirus Myocarditis

1998
Acute myocarditis (Aretz et al. 1986) is prevalent in humans, with reports suggesting that 5%–20% of the population has suffered some form of viral myocarditis (Bandt et al. 1979; Okuni et al. 1975; Woodruff 1980). It is often fatal in infants (Cherry 1995; Kaplan et al. 1983; Martin et al. 1994). In older individuals the acute disease usually resolves
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Reovirus-Induced Immunosuppression

1989
Reoviruses are members of Reoviridae, a family of double-stranded (ds) RNA viruses that infect vertebrates, insects, arthropods, and plants.(1) Mammalian reoviruses are icosahedral virions, 76 nm in diameter, with a double capsid consisting of a central core of 52 nm surrounded by an outer protein shell.
GARZELLI, CARLO, Onodera T.
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The History of Avian Reovirus

Avian Diseases, 2000
In 1957, while studying the pathogenesis of Mycoplasma synoviae, Dr. Norman Olson et al. (22), at West Virginia University, reported the isolation of an agent producing synovitis from lesions in broilers that exhibited a lack of sensitivity to chlortetracycline and furazolidone. Olson reported in 1959 (23) that this particular agent was not susceptible
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THE ECOLOGY AND EPIDEMIOLOGY OF REOVIRUS

Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science, 1964
SummaryTests for VN and HI antibodies against reoviruses in the sera of quokkas of Bald Island, wallabies of the Abrolhos Islands, sheep, bats, rainbow trout, and humans of different age groups, have confirmed the apparent extraordinary ubiquity of reoviruses. HI and VN antibody to all three types of reovirus are present in a high percentage of sera of
N F, STANLEY   +3 more
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Assembly of the Reovirus Genome

1998
During the early days of molecular virology, the presumed monomolecular nature of their genomes was considered to be one of the primary virtues of viruses. However, in 1969, irrefutable evidence surfaced that reovirus genomes consist not of one, but of ten molecules of double-stranded (ds)RNA (Shatkin et al. 1968).
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