Results 271 to 280 of about 149,274 (318)
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Hemagglutinin of vesicular stomatitis virus
Archiv f�r die gesamte Virusforschung, 1969Hemagglutinin of vesicular stomatitis virus was prepared in suspension culture of BHK21/13 S cells maintained in a medium containing 0.4% bovine albumin and no serum. Optimal conditions for titration of VSV hemagglutinin included a low temperature, pH 5.8 and the use of goose erythrocytes.
P, Arstila, P, Halonen, A, Salmi
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Vesicular Stomatitis in the Horse
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 1993Vesicular stomatitis (VS) is a viral disease of livestock that results in vesicles and ulcerations on the teats, oral mucosa, tongue, and coronary bands. All three main serotypes of the VS virus can infect the horse. Although VS does not have a major impact on the equine industry, it is clinically identical to the other more economically devastating ...
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VESICULAR PHARYNGITIS AND STOMATITIS
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1939During the months of July and August 1938 there was an epidemic of febrile vesicular pharyngitis and stomatitis in three of the summer camps located on the shores of a lake in central New Hampshire. The disease presented three distinctive clinical features: vesicular throat lesions, high infectivity and a benign, self-limited course.
HAROLD D. LEVINE +2 more
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The shape of vesicular stomatitis virus
Virology, 1976Abstract Most vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) particles in situ and in vitro after mild treatment appear bacilliform rather than bullet-shaped. However, the nucleocapsid is bullet-shaped. Budding begins with the hemisphere containing the rounded end of the nucleocapsid and finishes with the completion of the nonnucleocapsid-containing “terminal ...
J, Orenstein +3 more
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Biophysical Studies of Vesicular Stomatitis Virus
Journal of Bacteriology, 1966McCombs, Robert M.(Baylor University College of Medicine, Houston, Tex.),Matilda Benyesh-Melnick, and Jean P. Brunschwig. Biophysical studies of vesicular stomatitis virus: J. Bacteriol.91:803–812. 1966.—The infectivity and morphology of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) were studied after density gradient centrifugation in cesium chloride (CsCI ...
R M, McCombs +2 more
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Interfering Component of Vesicular Stomatitis Virus
Nature, 1966INTERFERENCE during the replication of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) was first described by Cooper and Bellett1, who suggested that the interfering activity which was present in viruses collected after several successive undiluted passages resulted from a transmissible component.
J, Crick, B, Cartwright, F, Brown
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Vesicular Stomatitis And Related Viruses
1970Publisher Summary Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), an agent causing periodic outbreaks of disease among cattle and horses in Central and North America, is originally classified as an arbovirus on the basis of its sensitivity to ether, its isolation from arthropods, and its ability to multiply in mosquitoes.
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Vesicular Stomatitis-Alagoas (VSA)
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1978Information from: R. B. Tesh, Pacific Research Section, NAIAD, P.O. Box 1680, Honolulu, Hawaii 96806, 3 December 1975. Antigenic group: Vesicular Stomatitis group. Original source: Isolated by Claudio de Moraes Andrade at Recife, Brazil1 from tongue epithelium of mule showing vesicular lesions of tongue and feet.
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Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Pseudotypes of Retroviruses
2003Pseudotype viruses are phenotypically mixed virions containing the genome or nucleocapsid of one enveloped virus and the surface or envelope (env) glycoproteins of another. This chapter will concentrate on vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) pseudotypes retaining the VSV nucleocapsid but with alternative env glycoproteins derived from retroviruses.
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