Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (glioma)
30,880 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The relative susceptibility of neurons and glia, grown as monolayers in vitro, to rabies virus infection was explored. Established cell lines of neuronal or glial phenotype and primary cultures of cells derived from mouse dorsal root ganglia (DRC) or brain were used as homologues of the targets of rabies virus in the nervous system. Fixed rabies virus (CVS) strain was used in most experiments; other fixed rabies strains (PV, HEP, ERA) and a street rabies virus isolate were used in some. Virus-cell tropism was determined by immunofluorescence assay for rabies nucleocapsid antigen and cell permissivity was assessed by titration of virus yields. Neuronal cells always exhibited a much greater susceptibility to infection and a greater propensity to sustain viral growth. By immunofluorescence, 90-100% of neurons commonly had viral inclusion bodies, while doses of the virus three to four orders of magnitude higher still left greater than 99% of astrocytes, in brain cell cultures and 90 +/- 5% of the non-neuronal cells in DRG cultures without any obvious signs of rabies virus. Neuroblastoma cells (95 +/- 5% with viral antigens) produced viral yields about four orders of magnitude higher than glioma cells (10 +/- 5% with viral antigens). Though the overall infectivity of street virus was lower than that of fixed virus strains, a significantly higher viral tropism for neurons than for glia was maintained. Thus, primary neuronal cultures offer a means of exploring molecular events in rabies virus infection and their role in pathogenesis.
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PMID:Neurotropism of rabies virus. An in vitro study. 686 37

The existence of specific rabies virus (RV) glycoprotein (G) binding sites on the surfaces of neuroblastoma cells is demonstrated. Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf21) cells expressing G of the RV strain CVS (Gcvs-Sf21 cells) bind specifically to neuroblastoma cells of different species but not to any other cell type (fibroblast, myoblast, epithelial, or glioma). Attachment to mouse neuroblastoma NG108-15 cells is abolished by previous treatment of Gcvs-Sf2 cells with anti-G antibody. Substitutions for lysine at position 330 and for arginine at position 333 in RV G greatly reduce interaction between Gcvs-Sf21 cells and NG108-15 cells. These data are consistent with in vivo results: an avirulent RV mutant bearing the same double mutation is not able to infect sensory neurons or motoneurons (P. Coulon, J.-P. Ternaux, A. Flamand, and C. Tuffereau, J. Virol. 72:273-278, 1998) after intramuscular inoculation into a mouse. Furthermore, infection of NG108-15 cells by RV but not by vesicular stomatitis virus leads to a reduction of the number of binding sites at the neuronal-cell surface. Our data strongly suggest that these specific attachment sites on neuroblastoma cells represent a neuronal receptor(s) used by RV to infect certain types of neurons in vivo.
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PMID:Neuronal cell surface molecules mediate specific binding to rabies virus glycoprotein expressed by a recombinant baculovirus on the surfaces of lepidopteran cells. 944 3