نتایج جستجو برای: marv

تعداد نتایج: 133  

Journal: :Science translational medicine 2014
Emily P Thi Chad E Mire Raul Ursic-Bedoya Joan B Geisbert Amy C H Lee Krystle N Agans Marjorie Robbins Daniel J Deer Karla A Fenton Ian MacLachlan Thomas W Geisbert

Marburg virus (MARV) and the closely related filovirus Ebola virus cause severe and often fatal hemorrhagic fever (HF) in humans and nonhuman primates with mortality rates up to 90%. There are no vaccines or drugs approved for human use, and no postexposure treatment has completely protected nonhuman primates against MARV-Angola, the strain associated with the highest rate of mortality in natur...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2009
Kelly L Warfield Steven B Bradfute Jay Wells Loreen Lofts Meagan T Cooper D Anthony Alves Daniel K Reed Sean A VanTongeren Christine A Mech Sina Bavari

The lack of a mouse model has hampered an understanding of the pathogenesis and immunity of Marburg hemorrhagic fever (MHF), the disease caused by marburgvirus (MARV), and has created a bottleneck in the development of antiviral therapeutics. Primary isolates of the filoviruses, i.e., ebolavirus (EBOV) and MARV, are not lethal to immunocompetent adult mice. Previously, pathological, virologic, ...

2018
Kendra J. Alfson Laura E. Avena Jenny Delgado Michael W. Beadles Jean L. Patterson Ricardo Carrion Anthony Griffiths

Marburg virus (MARV) causes disease with high case fatality rates, and there are no approved vaccines or therapies. Licensing of MARV countermeasures will likely require approval via the FDA's Animal Efficacy Rule, which requires well-characterized animal models that recapitulate human disease. This includes selection of the virus used for exposure and ensuring that it retains the properties of...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2011
Lisa E Hensley Derron A Alves Joan B Geisbert Elizabeth A Fritz Christopher Reed Tom Larsen Thomas W Geisbert

BACKGROUND Marburg virus (MARV) infection causes a severe and often fatal hemorrhagic disease in primates; however, little is known about the development of MARV hemorrhagic fever. In this study we evaluated the progression of MARV infection in nonhuman primates. METHODS Eighteen cynomolgus monkeys were infected with MARV; blood and tissues were examined sequentially over an 8-day period to i...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2006
Sven Enterlein Viktor Volchkov Michael Weik Larissa Kolesnikova Valentina Volchkova Hans-Dieter Klenk Elke Mühlberger

Here we report recovery of infectious Marburg virus (MARV) from a full-length cDNA clone. Compared to the wild-type virus, recombinant MARV showed no difference in terms of morphology of virus particles, intracellular distribution in infected cells, and growth kinetics. The nucleocapsid protein VP30 of MARV and Ebola virus (EBOV) contains a Zn-binding motif which is important for the function o...

2014
Chad E. Mire Joan B. Geisbert Krystle N. Agans Benjamin A. Satterfield Krista M. Versteeg Elizabeth A. Fritz Heinz Feldmann Lisa E. Hensley Thomas W. Geisbert

The filoviruses, Marburg virus (MARV) and Ebola virus, causes severe hemorrhagic fever with high mortality in humans and nonhuman primates. A promising filovirus vaccine under development is based on a recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (rVSV) that expresses individual filovirus glycoproteins (GPs) in place of the VSV glycoprotein (G). These vaccines have shown 100% efficacy against filovir...

2012
Shridhar Bale Jean-Philippe Julien Zachary A. Bornholdt Christopher R. Kimberlin Peter Halfmann Michelle A. Zandonatti John Kunert Gerard J. A. Kroon Yoshihiro Kawaoka Ian J. MacRae Ian A. Wilson Erica Ollmann Saphire

Filoviruses, including Marburg virus (MARV) and Ebola virus (EBOV), cause fatal hemorrhagic fever in humans and non-human primates. All filoviruses encode a unique multi-functional protein termed VP35. The C-terminal double-stranded (ds)RNA-binding domain (RBD) of VP35 has been implicated in interferon antagonism and immune evasion. Crystal structures of the VP35 RBD from two ebolaviruses have ...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2003
Catharine M Bosio M Javad Aman Case Grogan Robert Hogan Gordon Ruthel Diane Negley Mansour Mohamadzadeh Sina Bavari Alan Schmaljohn

Ebola virus (EBOV) and Marburg virus (MARV) cause rapidly progressive hemorrhagic fever with high mortality and may possess specialized mechanisms to evade immune destruction. We postulated that immune evasion could be due to the ability of EBOV and MARV to interfere with dendritic cells (DCs), which link innate and adaptive immune responses. We demonstrate that EBOV and MARV infected and repli...

Journal: :Heliyon 2023

Marburg virus (MARV) is a causative agent of severe hemorrhagic fever with high fatality rates endemic in central Africa. Current outbreaks MARV Equatorial Guinea and Tanzania underline the relevance as public health emergency pathogen. In 2021, first known human case was confirmed Guinea, West Since no infectious could be isolated from that fatal we generated recombinant (rec) by reverse genet...

Journal: :Virology 2004
Catharine M Bosio Brian D Moore Kelly L Warfield Gordon Ruthel Mansour Mohamadzadeh M Javad Aman Sina Bavari

The filoviruses, Ebola (EBOV) and Marburg (MARV), are potential global health threats, which cause deadly hemorrhagic fevers. Although both EBOV and MARV logarithmically replicate in dendritic cells (DCs), these viruses do not elicit DC cytokine secretion and fail to activate and mature infected DCs. Here, we employed virus-like particles (VLPs) of EBOV and MARV to investigate whether these gen...

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