Results 181 to 190 of about 8,041 (214)
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Electron microscopic study of Herpesvirus saimiri
Virology, 1977Abstract Replication of Herpesvirus saimiri has been studied by electron microscopy in highly permissive primary owl monkey kidney cells (OMK) and less permissive Vero African green monkey kidney cells. In OMK cells, toroid structures were observed in nucleoids of immature and mature virions, and what has been previously described as intranuclear ...
T S, Tralka, J, Costa, A, Rabson
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Transmission of Plasmodium fragile to Saimiri Monkeys
The Journal of Parasitology, 1990Saimiri monkeys from Bolivia and Guyana were infected with the Nilgiri and Ceylon strains of Plasmodium fragile. Of 20 attempted sporozoite transmissions of the Ceylon strain involving 11 splenectomized Saimiri sciureus boliviensis, only 8 were successful, 2 by mosquito bite and 6 by intravenous injection of sporozoites dissected from salivary glands ...
W E, Collins +5 more
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Cytogenetics of the squirrel monkey (Saimiri sciureus)
1975Squirrel monkeys occur in nature in widely separated geographic regions of Central and South America. These animals are of value in many aspects of biomedical research for which purposes they have been imported into the United States and Europe and are being reproduced in breeding colonies on both of these continents.
T C, Jones, N S, Ma
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Morphology of the Interorbital Region of Saimiri sciureus
Folia Primatologica, 1983The skull of the platyrrhine primate Saimiri sciureus is distinguished by a large interorbital fenestra. Juvenile skulls still show a bony interorbital septum with some small gaps. A morphogenetic study was undertaken to better understand the structures of the interorbital region, which represents a linkage between the base of the braincase and the ...
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Cell transformation byHerpesvirus saimiri
Journal of Cellular Physiology, 2004AbstractHerpesvirus saimiri(Saimiriine herpesvirus‐2), a γ2‐herpesvirus (rhadinovirus) of non‐human primates, causes T‐lymphoproliferative diseases in susceptible organisms and transforms human and non‐human T lymphocytes to continuous growth in vitro in the absence of stimulation. T cells transformed byH. saimiriretain many characteristics of intact T
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Herpesvirus saimiri: Experimental Infection of Squirrel Monkeys (Saimiri sciureus)2
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1973Lawrence A. Falk +2 more
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Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2001
Helmut Fickenscher +1 more
exaly
Helmut Fickenscher +1 more
exaly

