排序方式: 共有46条查询结果,搜索用时 208 毫秒
21.
Herpes simplex virus type 1 dUTPase mutants are attenuated for neurovirulence, neuroinvasiveness, and reactivation from latency. 总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0
下载免费PDF全文
![点击此处可从《Journal of virology》网站下载免费的PDF全文](/ch/ext_images/free.gif)
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) encodes a dUTPase which has been shown to be dispensable for normal viral replication in cultured cells (S. J. Caradonna and Y. Cheng, J. Biol. Chem. 256:9834-9837, 1981; F. B. Fisher and V. G. Preston, Virology 148:190-197, 1986). However, the importance of this enzyme in vivo has not been determined. In this report, HSV-1 strain 17 syn+ and two isogenic engineered dUTPase-negative mutants were characterized in the mouse model. Both mutants replicated with wild-type kinetics and achieved wild-type titers in cultured cells. The mutants were 10-fold less neurovirulent than 17 syn+ following intracranial inoculation and more than 1,000-fold less virulent following footpad inoculation. The dUTPase- mutants replicated with wild-type kinetics in the footpad and entered and replicated efficiently in the peripheral nervous system of the mouse. However, their replication in the central nervous system was significantly reduced. The dUTPase- strains established latent infections but displayed a greatly reduced reactivation frequency in vivo. Neurovirulence, neuroinvasiveness, and reactivation frequency were all restored by recombination with wild-type dUTPase sequences. These results have important implications with regard to anti-herpesvirus therapeutic strategies. 相似文献
22.
ICP34.5 mutants of herpes simplex virus type 1 strain 17syn+ are attenuated for neurovirulence in mice and for replication in confluent primary mouse embryo cell cultures. 总被引:15,自引:13,他引:2
下载免费PDF全文
![点击此处可从《Journal of virology》网站下载免费的PDF全文](/ch/ext_images/free.gif)
In a recent report, the neurovirulence of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) was mapped to the ICP34.5 gene (J. Chou, E. R. Kern, R. J. Whitley, and B. Roizman, Science 250:1262-1266, 1990). In this report, specific mutations within ICP34.5 were constructed in HSV-1 strain 17syn+ to determine the effects of these mutations in a fully neurovirulent isolate. It was found that termination of the ICP34.5 gene after the N-terminal 30 amino acids resulted in a mutant, 17termA, which was 25- to 90-fold reduced in neurovirulence. This reduction of neurovirulence was associated with restricted replication of the mutant virus in mouse brain. The reduced replication phenotype was also evident in the trigeminal and dorsal root ganglia following inoculation at the periphery. 17termA was capable of replicating with wild-type kinetics in mouse footpads, and therefore the restriction seen in neural tissues was not due to a generalized replication defect in mouse cells. Significantly, replication of the mutant was also restricted in the mouse cornea in vivo and in confluent primary mouse embryo cells and mouse 10T1/2 cells in vitro. However, 17termA replicated with much greater efficiency in subconfluent mouse embryo cells, suggesting that the physiological state of the cell may be an important factor for productive replication of this mutant. Restoration of the ICP34.5 gene to the mutant resulted in a virus which displayed wild-type neurovirulence and replication kinetics in all cells and tissues tested. 相似文献
23.
Weaver T. E.; Sarin V. K.; Sawtell N.; Hull W. M.; Whitsett J. A. 《Journal of applied physiology》1988,65(2):982-987
Surfactant proteolipid (SP-B) is one of several hydrophobic peptides detected in organic extracts of pulmonary surfactant and associated with the dramatic surface-active properties of surfactant phospholipids. In the present study human SP-B was identified as a protein with a relative molecular weight (Mr) of 7,500-8,000 under reducing conditions; protein of Mr 18,000 was detected under nonreducing conditions by immunoblot analysis of organic extracts of bovine and human surfactant utilizing an antiserum directed against a 60-amino acid synthetic SP-B peptide. This peptide antiserum was subsequently used to identify SP-B in explant cultures of 18- to 23-wk gestation human fetal lung. Immunoprecipitation of explants labeled with [35S]methionine after 48 h of culture identified proteins of Mr 40,000-42,000, 25,000, and 18,000 after electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions. The Mr 18,000 form was reduced to Mr 7,500-8,000 in the presence of beta-mercaptoethanol. These molecular forms likely represent the SP-B precursor protein, a proteolytic intermediate, and the mature SP-B peptide, respectively. Immunocytochemistry with the peptide antiserum localized SPL(Phe) in granular inclusions in the apical region of type II-like epithelial cells, a pattern of staining similar to that observed for the major surfactant-associated protein of Mr 26,000-38,000 (SP-A). SP-B is a novel pulmonary surfactant-associated protein that is synthesized by the human alveolar type II epithelial cell as an Mr 40,000-42,000 precursor that is subsequently proteolytically processed to Mr 7,500-8,000. 相似文献
24.
Hunter NB Moseley Andrew N Lane Alex C Belshoff Richard M Higashi Teresa WM Fan 《BMC biology》2012,10(1):1-2
This article is a response to Wang and Luo. See correspondence article http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/10/30/ [WEBCITE] and the original research article http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/9/24 [WEBCITE]. 相似文献
25.
The binocular region of mouse visual cortex is strongly dominated by inputs from the contralateral eye. Here we show in adult mice that depriving the dominant contralateral eye of vision leads to a persistent, NMDA receptor-dependent enhancement of the weak ipsilateral-eye inputs. These data provide in vivo evidence for metaplasticity as a mechanism for binocular competition and demonstrate that an ocular dominance shift can occur solely by the mechanisms of response enhancement. They also show that adult mouse visual cortex has a far greater potential for experience-dependent plasticity than previously appreciated. These insights may force a revision in how data on ocular dominance plasticity in mutant mice have been interpreted. 相似文献
26.
27.
The first central stage of electrosensory processing in fish takes place in structures with local circuitry that resembles the cerebellum. Cerebellum-like structures and the cerebellum itself share common patterns of gene expression and may also share developmental and evolutionary origins. Given these similarities it is natural to ask whether insights gleaned from the study of cerebellum-like structures might be useful for understanding aspects of cerebellar function and vice versa. Work from electrosensory systems has shown that cerebellum-like circuitry acts to generate learned predictions about the sensory consequences of the animals’ own behavior through a process of associative plasticity at parallel fiber synapses. Subtraction of these predictions from the actual sensory input serves to highlight unexpected and hence behaviorally relevant features. Learning and prediction are also central to many current ideas regarding the function of the cerebellum itself. The present review draws comparisons between cerebellum-like structures and the cerebellum focusing on the properties and sites of synaptic plasticity in these structures and on connections between plasticity and learning. Examples are drawn mainly from the electrosensory lobe (ELL) of mormyrid fish and from extensive work characterizing the role of the cerebellum in Pavlovian eyelid conditioning and vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) modification. Parallels with other cerebellum-like structures, including the gymnotid ELL, the elasmobranch dorsal octavolateral nucleus (DON), and the mammalian dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) are also discussed. 相似文献
28.
29.
30.
This review focuses on recent progress in understanding mechanisms for filtering self-generated sensory signals in cerebellum-like circuits in fish and mammals. Recent in vitro studies in weakly electric gymnotid fish have explored the interplay among anti-Hebbian plasticity, synaptic dynamics, and feedforward inhibition in canceling self-generated electrosensory inputs. Studies of the mammalian dorsal cochlear nucleus have revealed multimodal integration and anti-Hebbian plasticity, suggesting that this circuit may adaptively filter incoming auditory information. In vivo studies in weakly electric mormryid fish suggest a key role for granule cell coding in sensory filtering. The clear links between synaptic plasticity and systems level sensory filtering in cerebellum-like circuits may provide insights into hypothesized adaptive filtering functions of the cerebellum itself. 相似文献