نتایج جستجو برای: orthomyxoviridae

تعداد نتایج: 8630  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2015
Brent A Hackett Ari Yasunaga Debasis Panda Michael A Tartell Kaycie C Hopkins Scott E Hensley Sara Cherry

Viruses must gain entry into cells to establish infection. In general, viruses enter either at the plasma membrane or from intracellular endosomal compartments. Viruses that use endosomal pathways are dependent on the cellular factors that control this process; however, these genes have proven to be essential for endogenous cargo uptake, and thus are of limited value for therapeutic interventio...

Journal: :Biochemical Society transactions 2014
Agnieszka Martyna Jeremy Rossman

Influenza A virus belongs to the Orthomyxoviridae family. It is an enveloped virus that contains a segmented and negative-sense RNA genome. Influenza A viruses cause annual epidemics and occasional major pandemics, are a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and have a significant financial impact on society. Assembly and budding of new viral particles are a complex and multi-step p...

2014
Bernadette Crescenzo-Chaigne Cyril Barbezange Vianney Frigard Damien Poulain Sylvie van der Werf Volker Thiel

Exchange of the non coding regions of the NP segment between type A and C influenza viruses was used to demonstrate the importance not only of the proximal panhandle, but also of the initial distal panhandle strength in type specificity. Both elements were found to be compulsory to rescue infectious virus by reverse genetics systems. Interestingly, in type A influenza virus infectious context, ...

2011
Justin Lessler Derek A.T. Cummings Jonathan M. Read Shuying Wang Huachen Zhu Gavin J.D. Smith Yi Guan Chao Qiang Jiang Steven Riley

Variation in influenza incidence between locations is commonly observed on large spatial scales. It is unclear whether such variation occurs on smaller spatial scales and whether it is the result of heterogeneities in population demographics or more subtle differences in population structure and connectivity. Here we show that significant differences in immunity to influenza A viruses among com...

2009
Sally Nofs Mohamed Abd-Eldaim Kathy V. Thomas David Toplon Dawn Rouse Melissa Kennedy

In February 2007, an outbreak of respiratory disease occurred in a group of giant anteaters (Myrmecophaga tridactyla) at the Nashville Zoo. Isolates from 2 affected animals were identified in March 2007 as a type A influenza virus related to human influenza subtype H1N1.

Journal: :Lancet 2014
Leslie A Reperant Thijs Kuiken Bryan T Grenfell Albert D M E Osterhaus

Zoonotic influenza viruses that are a few mutations away from pandemic viruses circulate in animals, and can evolve into airborne-transmissible viruses in human beings. Paradoxically, such viruses only occasionally emerge in people; the four influenza pandemics that occurred in the past 100 years were caused by zoonotic viruses that acquired efficient transmissibility. Emergence of a pandemic v...

Journal: :Virology 2000
J K Taubenberger A H Reid T G Fanning

In the fall and winter of 1918–1919, an influenza pandemic of unprecedented virulence swept the globe leaving 40 million or more dead in its wake. The virus responsible for this catastrophe was not isolated at the time, and it seemed that this very lethal infectious agent was lost for study. However, it has recently become possible to study the genetic features of the 1918 “Spanish” influenza v...

2012
Rong-Hua Wang Zhen Jin Quan-Xing Liu Johan van de Koppel David Alonso

Avian influenza virus reveals persistent and recurrent outbreaks in North American wild waterfowl, and exhibits major outbreaks at 2-8 years intervals in duck populations. The standard susceptible-infected- recovered (SIR) framework, which includes seasonal migration and reproduction, but lacks environmental transmission, is unable to reproduce the multi-periodic patterns of avian influenza epi...

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