نتایج جستجو برای: viral proteins

تعداد نتایج: 678789  

2014
Mi-Ri Park Rae-Dong Jeong Kook-Hyung Kim

The movement of potexviruses through the cytoplasm to plasmodesmata (PD) and through PD to adjacent cells depends on the viral and host cellular proteins. Potexviruses encode three movement proteins [referred to as the triple gene block (TGB1-3)]. TGB1 protein moves cell-to-cell through PD and requires TGB2 and TGB3, which are endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-located proteins. TGB3 protein directs th...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2002
Rosalia Mora Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan Peter Palese Adolfo García-Sastre

Influenza virions bud preferentially from the apical plasma membrane of infected epithelial cells, by enveloping viral nucleocapsids located in the cytosol with its viral integral membrane proteins, i.e., hemagglutinin (HA), neuraminidase (NA), and M2 proteins, located at the plasma membrane. Because individually expressed HA, NA, and M2 proteins are targeted to the apical surface of the cell, ...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2004
Travis J Taylor David M Knipe

In this study, we have used immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry to identify over 50 cellular and viral proteins that are associated with the herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) ICP8 single-stranded DNA-binding protein. Many of the coprecipitating cellular proteins are known members of large cellular complexes involved in (i) DNA replication or damage repair, including RPA and MSH6; (ii) nonhom...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1997
M D Krathwohl R Hromas D R Brown H E Broxmeyer K H Fife

Many viruses have evolved mechanisms for evading the host immune system by synthesizing proteins that interfere with the normal immune response. The poxviruses are among the most accomplished at deceiving their hosts' immune systems. The nucleotide sequence of the genome of the human cutaneous poxvirus, molluscum contagiosum virus (MCV) type 1, was recently reported to contain a region that res...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2001
M.J. Tomishima L.W. Enquist

Pseudorabies virus, an alpha-herpesvirus, is capable of infecting the nervous system and spreading between synaptically connected neurons in diverse hosts. At least three viral membrane proteins (gE, gI, and Us9) are necessary for the spread of infection from presynaptic to postsynaptic neurons (anterograde spread) in infected rodents. To understand how these proteins effect anterograde spread ...

Journal: :Microbiology and molecular biology reviews : MMBR 2008
Robert F Kalejta

SUMMARY Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a common, medically relevant human herpesvirus. The tegument layer of herpesvirus virions lies between the genome-containing capsids and the viral envelope. Proteins within the tegument layer of herpesviruses are released into the cell upon entry when the viral envelope fuses with the cell membrane. These proteins are fully formed and active and control v...

Journal: :Cell 2009
Sagi D. Shapira Irit Gat-Viks Bennett O.V. Shum Amelie Dricot Marciela M. de Grace Liguo Wu Piyush B. Gupta Tong Hao Serena J. Silver David E. Root David E. Hill Aviv Regev Nir Hacohen

During the course of a viral infection, viral proteins interact with an array of host proteins and pathways. Here, we present a systematic strategy to elucidate the dynamic interactions between H1N1 influenza and its human host. A combination of yeast two-hybrid analysis and genome-wide expression profiling implicated hundreds of human factors in mediating viral-host interactions. These factors...

1998
Sarah K. Wootton Eric A. Nelson Dongwan Yoo SARAH K. WOOTTON ERIC A. NELSON DONGWAN YOO

Herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1) is a neurotropic pathogen of humans that establishes latent infection in the sensory ganglia innervating the site of primary infection. A number of genes control HSV-1 pathogenicity and latency. Open reading frame P (ORF P) is one of these genes that might have a role in latency and pathogenesis. A complication in the analysis of the role of ORF P in the HSV-...

2016
Stacia L. Phillips Erik J. Soderblom Shelton S. Bradrick Mariano A. Garcia-Blanco

UNLABELLED Dengue virus is the most prevalent cause of arthropod-borne infection worldwide. Due to the limited coding capacity of the viral genome and the complexity of the viral life cycle, host cell proteins play essential roles throughout the course of viral infection. Host RNA-binding proteins mediate various aspects of virus replication through their physical interactions with viral RNA. H...

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