Search results for "viruses"

showing 10 items of 1182 documents

Enteric calicivirus and rotavirus infections in domestic pigs

2009

SUMMARYWe report the prevalence of rotavirus and calicivirus infections, along with their respective association with diarrhoea in the porcine population of the region of northern Spain. A total of 221 samples were collected at random from different farms in the region and from the main slaughterhouse facility in the city of Zaragoza. Faecal samples were scored as diarrhoeic or normal and grouped into five groups to match general farm management and age criteria: group I (suckling 0–4 weeks), group II (weaning >4–8 weeks), group III (transition >8–16 weeks), group IV (fattening >16–24 weeks) and group V (adults >24 weeks). Group A rotavirus detection and caliciviruses were inves…

DiarrheaRotavirusVeterinary medicineGenotypeSwineEpidemiologyvirusesSus scrofaPopulationPrevalenceReoviridaeBiologymedicine.disease_causeRotavirus InfectionsFecesfluids and secretionsRotavirusGenotypePrevalencemedicineAnimalseducationCaliciviridae InfectionsSwine Diseaseseducation.field_of_studyReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionNorovirusAge Factorsvirus diseasesbiology.organism_classificationVirologyCaliciviridaeVirus SheddingDiarrheaInfectious DiseasesSpainNorovirusmedicine.symptomEpidemiology and Infection
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Genetic heterogeneity of porcine enteric caliciviruses identified from diarrhoeic piglets

2008

Enteric caliciviruses (noroviruses and sapoviruses) are responsible for the majority of non-bacterial gastroenteritis in humans of all age groups. Analysis of the polymerase and capsid genes has provided evidence for a huge genetic diversity, but the understanding of their ecology is limited. In this study, we investigated the presence of porcine enteric caliciviruses in the faeces of piglets with diarrhoea. A total of 209 samples from 118 herds were analysed and calicivirus RNA was detected by RT-PCR in 68 sample (32.5%) and in 46 herds (38.9%), alone or in mixed infection with group A and C rotaviruses. Sequence and phylogenetic analysis of the calicivirus-positive samples characterized t…

DiarrheaRotavirusmedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaGenes ViralSwineanimal diseasesvirusesMolecular Sequence DataBiologymedicine.disease_causeRotavirus InfectionsEnteritis Porcine calicivirus SapovirusEnteritisMicrobiologyFecesfluids and secretionsMedical microbiologyVirologyGenetic variationGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyFecesPhylogenyCaliciviridae InfectionsSwine DiseasesBase SequenceGenetic heterogeneityvirus diseasesOutbreakGenetic VariationSapovirusGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyGastroenteritisNorovirusCaliciviridaeSequence Alignment
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Detection of enteric adenoviruses 40 and 41 in stool specimens by monoclonal antibody-based enzyme immunoassays

1996

To examine the role of enteric adenoviruses (Ad40 and Ad41) in children with acute gastroenteritis, we evaluated 273 children with diarrhoea and 137 without enteric symptoms in Palermo, Italy, during an 8-month period. Stools were tested by two home-made monoclonal-based ELISAs to detected genus-specific adenovirus antigen and to type Ad40 and Ad41. Twenty-five samples (6.1%) were found to contain adenovirus, 18 of which were grown in Graham 293 and in HEp-2 cells. Ad40 and Ad41 were detected in 2.6% of children with diarrhoea and in none in the control group, while non-enteric adenoviruses were obtained from both patients (3.2%) and controls (6.5%). Samples containing Ad40 and Ad41 were po…

Diarrheamedicine.drug_classImmunologyEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayMonoclonal antibodymedicine.disease_causeVirusCell LineAdenovirus Infections HumanFecesAgglutination TestsVirologyPrevalencemedicineHumansTypingChildbiologybusiness.industryAdenoviruses HumanAntibodies Monoclonalbiology.organism_classificationVirologyGastroenteritisLatex fixation testAdenoviridaeMastadenovirusDiarrheaItalyEvaluation Studies as TopicMonoclonalmedicine.symptombusinessResearch in Virology
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Intracerebral Borna Disease Virus Infection of Bank Voles Leading to Peripheral Spread and Reverse Transcription of Viral RNA

2011

Bornaviruses, which chronically infect many species, can cause severe neurological diseases in some animal species; their association with human neuropsychiatric disorders is, however, debatable. The epidemiology of Borna disease virus (BDV), as for other members of the family Bornaviridae, is largely unknown, although evidence exists for a reservoir in small mammals, for example bank voles (Myodes glareolus). In addition to the current exogenous infections and despite the fact that bornaviruses have an RNA genome, bornavirus sequences integrated into the genomes of several vertebrates millions of years ago. Our hypothesis is that the bank vole, a common wild rodent species in traditional B…

Disease reservoirviruksetEpidemiologyanimal diseasesvirusesVeterinary MicrobiologyUrineVirus ReplicationMOUSE413 Veterinary sciencePolymerase Chain ReactionFecesInfectious Diseases of the Nervous SystemZoonosesBRAINBorna disease virusAntigens Viralbornavirus0303 health sciencesBorna diseaseMultidisciplinarybiologyArvicolinaeZoonotic DiseasesQR3. Good healthBank voleInfectious DiseasesBorna Virus InfectionVeterinary DiseasesArvicolinaeMedical MicrobiologyWILD RODENTSRNA ViralMedicineViral VectorsVeterinary PathologyResearch ArticleEXPRESSIONNeurovirulenceScienceUrinary BladdereducationANTIGENMicrobiologyVector BiologyInfectious Disease EpidemiologyVirusRATSPERSISTENT03 medical and health sciencesVirologyPeripheral Nervous SystemAnimalsHumansViral Nucleic AcidViral sheddingBiologyDisease Reservoirs030304 developmental biology030306 microbiologySTRAINSCENTRAL-NERVOUS-SYSTEMReproducibility of ResultsReverse TranscriptionVeterinary Virologybiology.organism_classificationVirologyViral ReplicationReverse transcriptaseMODELAnimals NewbornViral replicationBorna DiseaseAntibody FormationDNA ViralVeterinary ScienceViral Transmission and InfectionPLoS ONE
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Heterogeneity in the Response of Different Subtypes of Drosophila melanogaster Midgut Cells to Viral Infections

2021

This article belongs to the Section Viral Immunology, Vaccines, and Antivirals.

Drosophila virusesSingle-cell genomicsvirusesVirus-host interactionMicrobiologyViruscell-type-specific gene expressionTranscriptomeVirologyMelanogasterHeat shockGeneSingle-cell RNA-seqsingle-cell RNA-seqvirus-host interactionbiologydual RNA-seqsingle-cell genomicsRNAbiology.organism_classificationVirologyQR1-502Infectious DiseasesViral replicationantiviral heat shock responseCell-type-specific gene expression<i>Drosophila</i> virusesDrosophila melanogasterDual RNA-seqViruses
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Hepatitis E Virus Detection in Liver Tissue from Patients with Suspected Drug-Induced Liver Injury

2015

Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection is increasingly recognized as a cause of acute hepatitis in the industrialized world. We aimed to determine the frequency of acute Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection in cases of suspected drug-induced liver injury (DILI), mainly a diagnosis of exclusion. To this aim, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) liver tissues of all cases routinely processed in our institute during a 2 ½ years period in which DILI was amongst the differential diagnoses (157 liver biopsies, one liver explant) were subjected to semi-nested RT-PCR for the detection of hepatitis E virus (HEV) RNA. Histopathology was re-evaluated on all cases tested positive. HEV RNA was detectable in…

DrugPathologymedicine.medical_specialtymedia_common.quotation_subjectviruses610 Medicine & health2700 General Medicinemedicine.disease_causeliverHepatitis E virushepatitis E virus infection10049 Institute of Pathology and Molecular PathologyGenotypeHepatitis E virusmedicinehepatitismedia_commonLiver injuryHepatitislcsh:R5-920molecular testingbusiness.industryvirus diseasesGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseDiagnosis of exclusiondigestive system diseasesOriginal Research in MedicineEtiologyMedicineHistopathologylcsh:Medicine (General)businessdrug-induced liver injuryFrontiers in Medicine
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Split decomposition A technique to analyze viral evolution

1993

A clustering technique allowing a restricted amount of overlapping and based on an abstract theory of coherent decompositions of finite metrics is used to analyze the evolution of foot-and-mouth disease viruses. The emerging picture is compatible with the existence of viral populations with a quasispecies structure and illustrates various forms of evolution of this virus family. In addition, it allows the correlation of these forms with geographic occurrence.

EVOLUTIONARY TREESViral quasispeciesBiologyAbstract theoryOVERLAPPING CLUSTERINGAphthovirusMolecular evolutionAnimalsQuantitative Biology::Populations and EvolutionSerotypingCluster analysisGeneticsMultidisciplinaryModels GeneticPhylogenetic treeQUASI-SPECIESHamming distanceBiological EvolutionInvestigation methodsViral evolutionVirusesCattleBiological systemMonte Carlo MethodMathematicsResearch Article
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Slow Infection due to Lowering the Amount of Intact versus Empty Particles Is a Characteristic Feature of Coxsackievirus B5 Dictated by the Structura…

2019

Enterovirus B species typically cause a rapid cytolytic infection leading to efficient release of progeny viruses. However, they are also capable of persistent infections in tissues, which are suggested to contribute to severe chronic states such as myocardial inflammation and type 1 diabetes. In order to understand the factors contributing to differential infection strategies, we constructed a chimera by combining the capsid proteins from fast-cytolysis-causing echovirus 1 (EV1) with nonstructural proteins from coxsackievirus B5 (CVB5), which shows persistent infection in RD cells. The results showed that the chimera behaved similarly to parental EV1, leading to efficient cytolysis in both…

EchovirusBiolääketieteet - BiomedicinevirusesImmunologyViral Nonstructural ProteinsCoxsackievirusVirus Replicationmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyVirusChimera (genetics)CapsidCell Line TumorVirologyEnterovirus InfectionsmedicineHumansviral structural proteinsvirus-host interactionsViral Structural Proteinsbiologyenterovirusviral nonstructural proteinsbiology.organism_classificationVirologyVirus-Cell InteractionsEnterovirus B HumanCytolysisCapsidLytic cycleKasvibiologia mikrobiologia virologia - Plant biology microbiology virologyInsect ScienceHost-Pathogen InteractionsEnterovirusinfection kinetics
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Hydrophobic pocket targeting probes for enteroviruses

2015

Visualization and tracking of viruses without compromising their functionality is crucial in order to understand virus targeting to cells and tissues, and to understand the subsequent subcellular steps leading to virus uncoating and replication. Enteroviruses are important human pathogens causing a vast number of acute infections, and are also suggested to contribute to the development of chronic diseases like type I diabetes. Here, we demonstrate a novel method to target site-specifically the hydrophobic pocket of enteroviruses. A probe, a derivative of Pleconaril, was developed and conjugated to various labels that enabled the visualization of enteroviruses under light and electron micros…

EchovirusEndosomevirusesCoxsackievirus InfectionsBiologyCoxsackievirusmedicine.disease_causeenterovirusesVirusCell Line TumormedicineHumansGeneral Materials Sciencemolecular probesta116OxazolesFluorescent DyesInfectivityOxadiazolesVirus Uncoatingta1182trackingbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyEnterovirus B HumanCapsidhydrophobic pocketCytoplasmBiophysicsGoldHydrophobic and Hydrophilic InteractionsNanoscale
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Site-specific targeting of enterovirus capsid by functionalized monodisperse gold nanoclusters

2014

Development of precise protocols for accurate site-specific conjugation of monodisperse inorganic nanoparticles to biological material is one of the challenges in contemporary bionanoscience and nanomedicine. We report here a successful site-specific covalent conjugation of functionalized atomically monodisperse gold clusters with 1.5-nm metal cores to viral surfaces. Water-soluble Au102(para-mercaptobenzoic acid)44 clusters, functionalized by maleimide linkers to target cysteines of viral capsid proteins, were synthesized and conjugated to enteroviruses echovirus 1 and coxsackievirus B3. Quantitative analysis of transmission electron microscopy images and the known virus structures showed …

EchovirusMaterials sciencevirusesta221Metal NanoparticlesConjugated systemmedicine.disease_causeVirusCell LineNanoclusterschemistry.chemical_compoundCapsidMicroscopy Electron Transmissionmedicineta116MaleimideEnterovirusMultidisciplinaryta114ta1182CrystallographychemistryCapsidCovalent bondPhysical SciencesBiophysicsNanomedicineGoldProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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