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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The critical point dried (CPD) whole cell technique was applied to the study of the morphogenesis and morphology of rabies virus and vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) in mouse
neuroblastoma
and baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells. With the stereoscopic technique, progeny viruses at the cell surface and within the cytoplasm of the CPD whole cells were clearly visualized. The presence of many fine cellular processes and of virus budding from these processes were prominent features of the infected cells. Long strings of virus particles and virus apparently fused into different forms were often seen; a possible mechanism for the formation of these aberrant forms is discussed. Negative staining of the CPD whole cells clearly revealed the detailed structure of virus particles in the process of budding.
...
PMID:Application of the critical point dried whole cell technique to the study of animal rhabdoviruses. 20 90
A temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV), tsG31, produces a prolonged central nervous system disease in mice with pathological features similar to those of slow viral diseases. tsG31 and the subsequent virus recovered from the central nervous system (tsG31BP) of mice infected with tsG31 were compared with the parental wild-type (WT) VSV for plaque morphology, growth kinetics, thermal sensitivity of the virions, and viral protein synthesis and maturation. Several properties of the central nervous system isolate distinguished this virus from the original tsG31 and the WT VSV. The WT VSV produced clear plaques with complete cell lysis, and the tsG31 produced diffuse plaques and incomplete cell lysis, whereas the tsG31BP had clear plaques similar to those of the WT VSV. Although plaque morphology suggested that tsG31BP virus was a revertant to the WT, growth kinetics in either BHK-21 or
neuroblastoma
(N-18) cells indicated that this virus was similar to tsG31, with a productive cycle at 31 degrees C and no infectious virus at 39 degrees C. At 37 degrees C, however, the tsG31BP matured much slower than did the original tsG31 (and produced only 1% of the yield measured at 31 degrees C). WT VSV produced similar quantities of infectious virions at 31, 37, and 39 degrees C. The lack of infectious virions at 39 degrees C for the ts mutants was presumably not due to a greater rate of inactivation at 39 degrees C. Unlike WT VSV, which synthesized viral proteins equally well at all three temperatures, tsG31 had a reduced synthesis of all the structural proteins at 37 and 39 degrees C, compared with that at 31 degrees C; the formation of the M protein was most temperature sensitive. In addition, fractionation of the infected cells indicated that the incorporation of the M and N proteins into the cellular membranes was also disrupted at the higher, nonpermissive temperatures. Several characteristics of protein synthesis during tsG31BP infection at 39 degrees C distinguished this virus from tsG31: (i) no mature viral proteins were detected at 39 degrees C; (ii) several host proteins were [ill], suggesting that the virus was incapable of completely depressing host macromolecular synthesis; and (iii) a great proportion of the incorporated radioactivity was found in unusually high-molecular-weight proteins. In addition, at 37 degrees C, the tsG31BP virus showed a decreased synthesis of viral proteins and reduced assembly of the viral structural proteins.
...
PMID:Growth and maturation of a vesicular stomatitis virus temperature-sensitive mutant and its central nervous system isolate. 21 25
Ultrastructural immunoperoxidase studies were done in spinal cords of mice infected with wild type vesicular
stomatitis
virus or its temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant G31. Infected neurons showed subplasmalemmal staining of viral antigen and staining of viral particles budding from the neuronal membrane in wild-type vesicular
stomatitis
virus infection, whereas diffuse membrane and cytoplasmic staining with no budding virus was observed in ts G31 infection. Such findings suggest rapid viral assembly and release of viral particles from cells infected with wild-type virus. In contrast, maturation of ts G31 appears defective, and this would lead to accumulation of viral antigen in the cytoplasm of infected cells. These results correlate with studies in
neuroblastoma
cells which investigated the growth cycles of wild type, ts G31, and the spinal cord isolate of ts G31 as well as the viral protein-synthetic capacity of these viruses.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural-immunohistochemical evidence for a maturation defect of temperature-sensitive G31 vesicular stomatitis virus in murine spinal cord neurons. 22 80
A temperature sensitive mutant of vesicular
stomatitis
virus which does not mature properly when grown at 39 degrees C promoted extensive fusion of murine
neuroblastoma
cells at this nonpermissive temperature. Polykaryocytes apparently formed as a result of fusion from within the cells that requires low doses of infectious virions for its promotion and is dependent on viral protein synthesis. Although 90% of infected N-18
neuroblastoma
cells were fused by 15 h after infection, larger polykaryocytes continued to form, leading to an average of 28 nuclei per polykaryocyte as a result of polykaryocytes fusing to each other. Two
neuroblastoma
cell lines have been observed to undergo fusion, whereas three other cell lines (BHK-21, CHO, and 3T3) were incapable of forming polykaryocytes, suggesting that nervous system-derived cells are particularly susceptible to vesicular
stomatitis
virus-induced fusion. Although the normal assembly of the protein components of this virus is deficient at 39 degrees C, the G glycoprotein was inserted into the infected cell membranes at this temperature. Two lines of evidence suggest that the expression of G at the cell surface promotes this polykaryocyte formation: (i) inhibition of glycosylation, which may be involved in the migration of the G protein to the cellular plasma membranes, will inhibit the cell fusion reaction; (ii) addition of antiserum, directed toward the purified G glycoprotein, will also inhibit cell fusion.
...
PMID:Neuroblastoma cell fusion by a temperature-sensitive mutant of vesicular stomatitis virus. 22 47
Ninety-eight children with solid tumors resistant to conventional chemotherapy received adriamycin 90 mg/m2, either as a single intravenous injection or in 6 divided doses administered every 6 hours. Of the 88 evaluable children, 6 (7%) achieved a complete response and 26 (29%) achieved a partial response. Tumors which demonstrated significant response rates were:
neuroblastoma
(9/18), Wilms' tumor (7/13), rhabdomyosarcoma (4/11), and lymphoma (4/8). The toxicities observed with this regimen included: alopecia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, nausea, vomiting,
stomatitis
, febrile episodes, and ST-segment changes.
...
PMID:Adriamycin in the treatment of childhood solid tumors. A Southwest Oncology Group study. 119 48
Bloom's syndrome (BS) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by short stature, sensitivity to sunlight, and telangiectasic malar erythema. It is associated to chromosomal breakage, to primary combined immunodeficiency, and to a high incidence of neoplasias. The authors report the case of two siblings with BS and associated immunodeficiency. Both patients were male and 5 (A) and 4 (B) years old at the time of diagnosis. Chronic diarrhea, recurrent otitis media, purulent rhinitis, conjunctivitis and pyodermatitis were reported by patient A. Patient B was admitted with diagnosis of bilateral
neuroblastoma
and had the tumor resected. Later on, he presented with oral moniliasis, herpetic
stomatitis
, and skin abscesses. This patient did not have recurrent infections. Immunological evaluation showed normal serum levels of CH50, C3, and C4 for both patients. Serum IgG, IgA, IgM, and salivary IgA levels were: 455 mg/dl, 15mg/dl, 20mg/dl, 0.6mg/dl for A, and 400mg/dl, 15mg/dl, 20mg/dl, and 0.2mg/dl for B, respectively. Serum antipolio antibodies (1, 2, and 3) were normal, and low levels of isohemagglutinins were observed in both patients. T cells subset determination showed: patient A--OKT3 = 66%, OKT4 = 33%, OKT8 = 32%, and 4/8 ratio = 1.0; patient B--OKT3 = 70%, OKT4 = 32%, OKT8 = 34%, and 4/8 ratio = 1.0. In vitro cellular immune response to PHA was depressed only in patient B. Patients karyotype showed chromosomal breaks with sister chromatid exchanges. Neither patient had abnormal alphafetoprotein and carcinoembryonic antigen serum levels. The rarity of such associations justifies the presentation of the cases.
...
PMID:[Familial Bloom's syndrome associated with neuroblastoma]. 221 4
Human recombinant interferon, (rIFN)-gamma, induced a human
neuroblastoma
cell line GOTO to differentiate, but neither rIFN-alpha A nor -beta did. To elucidate the mechanism of this rIFN-gamma-specific differentiation-inducing effect, we established two rIFN-gamma-resistant variant GOTO clones. They were insensitive to the growth-inhibitory and differentiation-inducing effect of 1 X 10(3) IU/ml rIFN-gamma. They were slightly sensitive to the growth-inhibitory effect of rIFN-gamma (2 X 10(4) IU/ml). Parental GOTO cells were very insensitive to the antivesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) effect of all three types of rIFNs and even 2 X 10(4) IU/ml rIFN-gamma could not inhibit the cytopathic effect of 5 TCID50 VSV by 50%. The degree of this insensitivity was the same in the variant GOTO cells as in the parental GOTO cells.
...
PMID:Variant human neuroblastoma cell lines resistant to the differentiation-inducing effect of interferon-gamma. 250 84
Apparent interferon-mediated persistent infection of rabies virus (HEP-Flury strain) was established in a human
neuroblastoma
SYM-I (clone K-104) cell line, which had the ability to produce interferon. This infection produced variable but small amounts of progeny virus and interferon (up to 100 IU/ml), and resisted superinfection with vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) and Sindbis virus as well as homologous rabies virus. The treatment of this infection with anti-interferon antibody stimulated virus replication and extensive c.p.e. However, some cells survived and grew rapidly without any sign of c.p.e. These produced increased amounts (100 to 1000 times) of infectious and DI particles in the presence of anti-interferon antibody, becoming susceptible to superinfection with VSV but remaining resistant to the original rabies virus. Small plaque mutants appeared and replaced the original virus during the long-term cultivation of the persistent infection. Several mutants tested were all identified as Sdi (DI-resistant) mutants, suggesting that the persisting viruses were endowed by the Sdi mutation with a selective advantage over the original virus even in interferon-mediated persistent infections.
...
PMID:Persistent infection of rabies virus (HEP-Flury strain) in human neuroblastoma cells capable of producing interferon. 399 11
Six temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) isolated from the central nervous system (CNS) following injection with ts G31 (III) all possessed a post-transcriptional defect, not found in the initial virus, that affects the stability of viral RNA transcripts. Examination of viral RNA metabolism in mouse
neuroblastoma
(N-18) cells revealed that RNA synthesis of the CNS isolates was decreased considerably at elevated temperatures (up to 80 or 90% at 39 degrees C). In addition, analysis of the RNA transcripts suggested that little if any normal-sized transcripts were made in cells infected with these CNS isolates at either 37 degrees C or 39 degrees C. The RNA deficiencies did not appear to be the result of a temperature-sensitive lability of virion transcriptase as examined by in vitro transcriptase assays. However, when N-18 cells infected with one of the CNS isolates, ts G31 BP, were first preincubated at the permissive temperature of 31 degrees C for 3 h and then shifted to 39 degrees C, RNA synthesis proceeded at a rate comparable to that of 31 degrees C. The viral mRNA species synthesized following the temperature shift also contained normal sized tracts of poly(A) RNA, suggesting that neither the viral transcriptase nor its polyadenylate synthetase was thermally labile. However, for any of the six CNS isolates, all species of viral RNA synthesized in cells that were first preincubated at 31 degrees C degraded rapidly when the cells were shifted to 39 degrees C. In contrast little or no RNA degradation of either 42S progeny RNA or mRNA species was detected in the wild-type VSV, ts G31 or three other VSV mutants that are defective in some aspect of viral RNA metabolism: [ts G11 (I), ts G22 (II), ts G41 (IV)]. The apparent phenotype alteration in the stability of viral RNA in all of these CNS isolates is discussed in terms of the possible genotypic changes that may have occurred as well a the unique CNS disease that accompanies infection by these viruses.
...
PMID:RNA degradation defect in central nervous system isolates of vesicular stomatitis virus. 616 98
Morphological changes were extensive following infection of murine
neuroblastoma
N-18 cells with a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV), G31 (complementation group III), and incubation at 39 degrees C, a non-permissive condition for virion maturation. Incubation for 24 h after infection resulted in extensive morphological degeneration of mitochondria with over 80% from that in uninfected cells. Janus green B supravital staining, was reduced by 81% from that in uninfected cells. Cellular ATP levels were reduced by 50% 12 h after infection. Mitochondrial degeneration still occurred in infected cells after the inactivation of lysosomes with chloroquine. Extensive cell fusion and cytoplasmic vacuole formation also occurred during the non-permissive infection with ts G31. Loss of plasma membrane integrity was not the cause of vacuole formation since 90% of the cells were able to exclude trypan blue 24 h after infection, nor were the vacuoles the result of inactivation of the mitochondria since cyanide-poisoned cells did not form vacuoles. The cytopathic alterations observed in N-18 cells during the non-permissive infection of N-18 cells with ts G31 did not occur during the non-permissive infection of N-18 cells with ts G11 (I), ts G41 (IV), or u.v.-inactivated ts G31. However, the non-permissive infection with ts O45 (V) led to mitochondrial degeneration and cytoplasmic vacuole formation, but no cell fusion occurred. These results are discussed in light of the ultrastructural features previously observed in the central nervous system of mice infected with ts G31 and cells in culture infected with wild-type VSV.
...
PMID:Cytopathic effects in mouse neuroblastoma cells during a non-permissive infection with a mutant of vesicular stomatitis virus. 627 Feb 68
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