نتایج جستجو برای: antigenic drift

تعداد نتایج: 50696  

Journal: :Cell 2001
Michael H. Malim Michael Emerman

that there is an exponentially growing population size (Peeters and Sharp, 2000) and highlights the evolutionary " success " of HIV-1 in humans. is recombination. This can occur when a cell that is Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 dually infected with different viruses produces progeny ‡ Division of Human Biology virions with genomic RNAs from each virus, and strand-Fred Hutchinson Cancer Resea...

2017
Guiqin Wang Renfu Yin Paul Zhou Zhuang Ding

Hemagglutinin (HA) head has long been considered to be able to elicit only a narrow, strain-specific antibody response as it undergoes rapid antigenic drift. However, we previously showed that a heterologous prime-boost strategy, in which mice were primed twice with DNA encoding HA and boosted once with virus-like particles (VLP) from an H5N1 strain A/Thailand/1(KAN)-1/2004 (noted as TH DDV), i...

2012
Adam J. Kucharski Julia R. Gog

Recent serological studies of seasonal influenza A in humans suggest a striking characteristic profile of immunity against age, which holds across different countries and against different subtypes of influenza. For both H1N1 and H3N2, the proportion of the population seropositive to recently circulated strains peaks in school-age children, reaches a minimum between ages 35-65, then rises again...

2013
Jih-Hui Lin Shu-Chun Chiu Yung-Cheng Lin Ju-Chien Cheng Ho-Sheng Wu Marco Salemi Hsin-Fu Liu

The evolution and population dynamics of human influenza in Taiwan is a microcosm of the viruses circulating worldwide, which has not yet been studied in detail. We collected 343 representative full genome sequences of human influenza A viruses isolated in Taiwan between 1979 and 2009. Phylogenetic and antigenic data analysis revealed that H1N1 and H3N2 viruses consistently co-circulated in Tai...

2010
Nimalan Arinaminpathy Bryan Grenfell

BACKGROUND Influenza viruses show a significant capacity to evade host immunity; this is manifest both as large occasional jumps in the antigenic phenotype of viral surface molecules and in gradual antigenic changes leading to annual influenza epidemics in humans. Recent mouse studies show that avidity for host cells can play an important role in polyclonal antibody escape, and further that ele...

Journal: :Journal of tropical pediatrics 2010
G J Ebrahim

Influenza is a disease of global dimension occurring in annual epidemics, and infrequently as pandemic with high attack rates. The annual epidemics result in the host population updating its pool of humoral immunity by exposure to the most recent viruses carrying altered antigenic specificity caused by 'anti-gen shift' in the haemagglutinin (H) ligand. Pandemics are caused by 'antigen drift'. T...

2010
Ann Cullinane Debra Elton Jenny Mumford

Equine influenza virus (EIV) is considered the most important respiratory virus of horses because it is highly contagious and has the potential to disrupt major equestrian events. Equine influenza (EI) can be controlled by vaccination but it has been demonstrated repeatedly in the field that antigenic drift impacts on vaccine efficacy. EI surveillance maintains awareness of emergence and intern...

Journal: :The Journal of general virology 1997
I H Brown S Ludwig C W Olsen C Hannoun C Scholtissek V S Hinshaw P A Harris J W McCauley I Strong D J Alexander

H1N1 influenza A viruses isolated from pigs in Europe since 1981 were examined both antigenically and genetically and compared with H1N1 viruses from other sources. H1N1 viruses from pigs and birds could be divided into three groups: avian, classical swine and 'avian-like' swine viruses. Low or no reactivity of 'avian-like' swine viruses in HI tests with monoclonal antibodies raised against cla...

2002
Christopher W. Olsen

Since 1997, novel viruses of three different subtypes and five different genotypes have emerged as agents of influenza among pigs in North America. The appearance of these viruses is remarkable because there were no substantial changes in the overall epidemiology of swine influenza in the United States and Canada for over 60 years prior to this time. Viruses of the classical H1N1 lineage were v...

Journal: :JNMA; journal of the Nepal Medical Association 2010
M Khadka

The family Orthomyxoviridae consists of Influenza A virus which is negative sense single stranded virus. The genome of the virus is segmented and possesses a peculiar trait of genetic reassortment. The influenza virus on its envelop consists of the antigenic glycoprotein like haemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA). The changes in those glycoprotein components due to antigenic shift and anti...

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