نتایج جستجو برای: influenza virus nucleoprotein

تعداد نتایج: 432895  

Behrokh Farahmand , Farida Behzadian , Fatemeh Fotouhi-Chahooki , Mahdi Tat , Zahra Yousefi-Najafabadi ,

Background and Aims: The novel approaches in influenza vaccination have targeted more conserved viral proteins such as nucleoprotein (NP) to provide cross protection against all serotypes of influenza A viruses. Influenza specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) are able to lyse influenza-infected cells by recognition of NP, the major target molecule in virus for CTL responses. On the other hand,...

2015
Bogdan Tarus Hélène Bertrand Gloria Zedda Carmelo Di Primo Stéphane Quideau Anny Slama-Schwok

The nucleoprotein (NP) binds the viral RNA genome as oligomers assembled with the polymerase in a ribonucleoprotein complex required for transcription and replication of influenza A virus. Novel antiviral candidates targeting the nucleoprotein either induced higher order oligomers or reduced NP oligomerization by targeting the oligomerization loop and blocking its insertion into adjacent nucleo...

Journal: :iranian journal of virology 0
k majidzadeh- a iranian centers for breast cancer (icbc); academic center for education, culture and research (acecr), tehran, iran m soleimani tasnim biotechnology research center, aja university of medical sciences, tehran, iran v karimi departments of clinical sciences, faculty of veterinary medicine, university of tehran, tehran, iran a shojaee-estabragh qc expert ,pasteur institute of iran, tehran, iran a fanni department of microbiology, faculty of veterinary medicine, university of tehran, tehran, iran o mandegar department of microbiology, faculty of veterinary medicine, university of tehran, tehran, iran

background and aims: avian influenza (ai) h9n2 subtype was first reported to infect turkeys in the united states in 1966 and has been panzootic in eurasia. in iran, the h9n2 virus was first isolated from broiler chickens in 1998 in ghazvin province and it is the most prevalent subtype of influenza virus in poultry industry in iran at the present time. materials and methods: in this study, we se...

Journal: :Clinical and vaccine immunology : CVI 2013
Rogier Bodewes Martina M Geelhoed-Mieras Jens Wrammert Rafi Ahmed Patrick C Wilson Ron A M Fouchier Albert D M E Osterhaus Guus F Rimmelzwaan

Influenza A viruses cause annual epidemics and occasionally pandemics. Antibodies directed to the conserved viral nucleoprotein (NP) may play a role in immunity against various influenza A virus subtypes. Here, we assessed the immunological significance of a human monoclonal antibody directed to NP in vitro. This antibody bound to virus-infected cells but did not display virus-neutralizing acti...

2011
Marine L. B. Hillaire Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus Guus F. Rimmelzwaan

There is considerable interest in the development of broadly protective influenza vaccines because of the continuous emergence of antigenic drift variants of seasonal influenza viruses and the threat posed by the emergence of antigenically distinct pandemic influenza viruses. It has been recognized more than three decades ago that influenza A virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes recognize epi...

2011
Mette Valheim Hans Gamlem Britt Gjerset Anna Germundsson Bjørn Lium

The Norwegian pig population was considered free from influenza A virus infections until the first case of porcine pandemic influenza A (H1N1) 2009 virus infection in October 2009. Human to pig transmission of virus was suspected. Unusual lung lesions were observed in fattening pigs, with red, lobular, multifocal to coalescing consolidation, most frequently in the cranial, middle, and accessory...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 2000
Graeme E. Price Rong Ou Hong Jiang Lei Huang Demetrius Moskophidis

Antigenic variation is a strategy exploited by influenza viruses to promote survival in the face of the host adaptive immune response and constitutes a major obstacle to efficient vaccine development. Thus, variation in the surface glycoproteins hemagglutinin and neuraminidase is reflected by changes in susceptibility to antibody neutralization. This has led to the current view that antibody-me...

Journal: :Journal of virology 1977
M B Ritchey P Palese

Seven complementation-recombination groups of temperature-sensitive (ts) influenza WSN virus mutants have been previously isolated. Recently two of these groups (IV and VI) were shown to possess defects in the neuraminidase and the hemagglutinin gene, respectively, and two groups (I and III) were reported to have defects in the P3 and P1 proteins which are required for complementary RNA synthes...

2017
Orr Ashenberg Jai Padmakumar Michael B Doud Jesse D Bloom

The innate-immune restriction factor MxA inhibits influenza replication by targeting the viral nucleoprotein (NP). Human influenza virus is more resistant than avian influenza virus to inhibition by human MxA, and prior work has compared human and avian viral strains to identify amino-acid differences in NP that affect sensitivity to MxA. However, this strategy is limited to identifying sites i...

2013
Sylvie Chenavas Leandro F. Estrozi Anny Slama-Schwok Bernard Delmas Carmelo Di Primo Florence Baudin Xinping Li Thibaut Crépin Rob W. H. Ruigrok

Isolated influenza A virus nucleoprotein exists in an equilibrium between monomers and trimers. Samples containing only monomers or only trimers can be stabilized by respectively low and high salt. The trimers bind RNA with high affinity but remain trimmers, whereas the monomers polymerise onto RNA forming nucleoprotein-RNA complexes. When wild type (wt) nucleoprotein is crystallized, it forms ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید