Search results for "SUPERINFECTION"

showing 4 items of 14 documents

Multiple sclerosis patients show an increased spontaneous activity of their peripheral blood monocytes as measured by chemiluminescence

1983

I has been reported that myelin basic protein (BP) reacts extremely sensitively to peroxide, which is formed when monocytes/macrophages are stimulated to produce a "respiratory burst" (RB). We measured the RB activity by means of chemiluminescence in peripheral blood monocytes/macrophages (MO) of 17 MS patients, 5 patients with a viral infection of the CNS, and 14 control persons. The median of the spontaneous RB activity of MS patients compared with the median of our control group showed a highly significant increase (P = 0.0002). All MS patients examined possessed a clearly increased MO activity. The highest values, however, were found in MS patients in a bout (means = 315%, means = 296%)…

Multiple SclerosisInflammationmedicine.disease_causeMonocytesPathogenesisCentral Nervous System DiseasesmedicineHumansMacrophagebiologybusiness.industryMonocyteMultiple sclerosisGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseMyelin basic proteinRespiratory burstKineticsmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyVirus DiseasesSuperinfectionLuminescent MeasurementsImmunologybiology.proteinNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessActa Neurologica Scandinavica
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Vaccination with WT1 and PR3 Derived Peptides in Patients with AML/MDS and MUC1 Peptides in Patients with Multiple Myeloma - Preliminary Results.

2006

Abstract Background: It has been demonstrated that the Wilms Tumor gene (WT1) is highly expressed in various types of leukaemia. WT1 expression level reflects the extent of minimal residual disease and significantly increases at relapse. Proteinase 3 (Pr3) is an aberrantly expressed myeloid leukaemia protein and T cells with specificity for both, Wt1 and Pr3 derived antigens, have been generated in vitro from healthy individuals and cancer patients and lysed myeloid leukaemic blasts. MUC1(CD227) is presented on a considerable amount of multiple myeloma cell lines and plasmocytoma cells. MUC1-derived HLA-class I/II epitopes represent universal tumor antigens, which are also expressed by mali…

Myeloidbusiness.industryImmunologyWilms' tumorCell BiologyHematologymedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryMinimal residual diseaseTransplantationmedicine.anatomical_structureAntigenSuperinfectionImmunologymedicineBone marrowbusinessMultiple myelomaBlood
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The Social Life of Viruses

2021

Despite their simplicity, viruses exhibit certain types of social interactions. Situations in which a given virus achieves higher fitness in combination with other members of the viral population have been described at the level of transmission, replication, suppression of host immune responses, and host killing, enabling the evolution of viral cooperation. Although cellular coinfection with multiple viral particles is the typical playground for these interactions, cooperation between viruses infecting different cells is also established through cellular and viral-encoded communication systems. In general, the stability of cooperation is compromised by cheater genotypes, as best exemplified…

genetic structuresGenotypeSpatial structurevirusesPopulationVirus-virus interactionsSuperinfection exclusionBiologyVirus ReplicationVirus03 medical and health sciencesVirologymedicineDefective interfering particleseducationViral evolution030304 developmental biology0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studySocial evolution030306 microbiologyTransmission (medicine)Host (biology)Virionmedicine.diseaseCooperationEvolutionary biologyViral evolutionVirusesCoinfectionSocial evolutionAnnual Review of Virology
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Regulation of the Transferrin Receptor Recycling in Hepatitis C Virus-Replicating Cells

2020

After binding of its ligand transferrin, the transferrin receptor (TfR) is internalized via early endosomes. Ligand and receptor can be recycled. α-Taxilin was identified as an essential factor for TfR recycling. Apart from its role for iron uptake, TfR is a coreceptor for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. In HCV-replicating cells, the amount of a-taxilin is decreased. This study aims to investigate the effect of decreased α-taxilin levels in HCV-replicating cells on recycling of TfR, its amount on the cell surface, on iron uptake, and the impact of a disturbed TfR recycling on HCV superinfection exclusion. TfR amount and localization were determined by CLSM and surface biotinylation. α-ta…

hepatitis C virus0301 basic medicineEndosomemedia_common.quotation_subjectTransferrin receptorSuperinfection exclusionCell and Developmental Biology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineiron metabolismInternalizationReceptorlcsh:QH301-705.5iron metabolism ; transferrin receptor ; α-taxilin ; HCV superinfection ; Hepatitis C ; hepatitis C virusOriginal Researchmedia_commonchemistry.chemical_classificationα-taxilinHCV superinfectionvirus diseasesCell Biologytransferrin receptorLigand (biochemistry)Cell biology030104 developmental biologylcsh:Biology (General)chemistryTransferrin030220 oncology & carcinogenesisIntracellularDevelopmental BiologyFrontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology
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