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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
As part of an inquiry into factors that determine the virulence of fixed rabies virus, mouse
neuroblastoma
cells were infected in culture with high virulence and low virulence strains of Flury HEP virus. Low virulence
virus infection
differed from high virulence
virus infection
in (1) its more rapid production of progeny virus in the early cycles of
virus infection
as shown by the number of extracellular virus particles and the infectivity of the supernatant fluid; (2) its earlier development of viral antigens on the cell surface; and (3) its earlier and more severe morphologic alteration of the cell surface. Where applicable, the differences were corroborated by scanning and transmission electron microscopy of the infected cells using the critical point drying technique on whole cells. The number of cells susceptible to complement-dependent immunolysis was almost proportional to the number of cells that were surface antigen-positive regardless of the strain of the virus used. Implications of the difference in the kinetics of virus production and of the development of surface antigens between low and high virulence strains are discussed.
...
PMID:Rabies virus infection in mouse neuroblastoma cells. 6 72
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 girl developed subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE). Eight years earlier she had had measles infection contracted shortly after cytotoxic treatment and radiotherapy for a spinal
neuroblastoma
. The case illustrates that typical SSPE, like immunosuppressive measles encephalopathy, can arise after drug-induced immunosuppression, and supports the view that these diseases probably represent opposite ends of a spectrum induced by measles
virus infection
in an individual with some form of immunological deficiency.
...
PMID:Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis after drug-induced immunosuppression. 50 19
Five patients with an unusual encephalopathy, possible secondary to measles
virus infection
, are described. Features common to these patients are: an existing chronic disease, neurologic deterioration 2 1/2 to 6 months after a measles infection, and death several weeks later. These events occurred when the chronic disease (e.g. leukemia or
neuroblastoma
) was in remission. That the measles virus was the causative agent is suggested only by finding in brain and extracranial tissues intracytoplasmic and intranuclear inclusions which contained measleslike particles. Additional clinical features seen in each of the five patients were: seizures, hypertension, and the inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone.
...
PMID:Encephalopathy following measles infection in children with chronic illness. 127 Nov 91
The effect of persistent measles
virus infection
on the expression of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigens was studied. Mouse
neuroblastoma
cells C1300, clone NS20Y, were persistently infected with the Edmonston strain of measles virus. The persistently infected cell line, NS20Y/MS, expressed augmented levels of both H-2Kk and H-2Dd MHC class I glycoproteins. Activation of two interferon(IFN)-induced enzymes, known to be part of the IFN system: (2'-5')oligoadenylate synthetase and double-stranded-RNA-activated protein kinase, was detected. Measles-virus-infected cells elicited cytotoxic T lymphocytes that recognized and lysed virus-infected and uninfected
neuroblastoma
cells in an H-2-restricted fashion. Furthermore, immunization of mice with persistently infected cells conferred resistance to tumor growth after challenge with the highly malignant NS20Y cells. The rationale for using measles virus for immunotherapy is that most patients develop lifelong immunity after recovery or vaccination from this infection. Patients developing cancer are likely to have memory cells. A secondary response induced by measles-virus-infected cells may therefore induce an efficient immune response against non-infected tumour cells.
...
PMID:Persistent measles virus infection enhances major histocompatibility complex class I expression and immunogenicity of murine neuroblastoma cells. 134 54
DNA repair processes play an important role in the determination of radiation response in both normal and tumour cells. We have investigated one aspect of DNA repair in a number of human cell lines of varying radiosensitivity using the adenovirus 5 host cell reactivation assay (HCR). In this technique, gamma-irradiated virions are used to infect cells and the ability of the cellular repair systems to process this damage is assayed by a convenient immunoperoxidase method recognising viral structural antigen expression on the cell membrane 48 h after infection. Reduced HCR was exhibited by radioresistant HeLa cells and by a radiosensitive
neuroblastoma
cell line, HX142. In contrast, an ataxia telangiectasia cell line, AT5 BIVA, did not show reduced HCR. On the basis of these results we can make no general conclusions about the relevance of HCR to cellular radiosensitivity. We have extended these studies to determine whether our cell lines exhibited enhanced viral reactivation (ER) following a small priming dose of gamma-radiation given to the cells before
viral infection
. No evidence for this phenomenon was found either in normal or tumour cell lines.
...
PMID:Host cell reactivation of gamma-irradiated adenovirus 5 in human cell lines of varying radiosensitivity. 163 59
Alphaviruses replicate in a wide variety of cells in vitro. The prototype alphavirus, Sindbis virus, causes an age-dependent encephalitis in mice and serves as an important model system for the study of alphavirus neurovirulence. To begin to understand the role of cellular virus receptors in the pathogenesis of Sindbis
virus infection
, we developed an anti-idiotypic antibody made in rabbits against a neutralizing monoclonal antibody specific for the E2 surface glycoprotein. The anti-idiotypic antibody (anti-Id 209) bound to N18 mouse
neuroblastoma
cells and inhibited adsorption of 35S-labeled virus by 50%. Binding of anti-Id 209 was inhibited by pretreatment of N18 cells with various proteases but not with neuraminidase or phospholipase, while virus binding was inhibited by pretreatment with phospholipase as well as protease. Anti-Id 209 precipitated proteins of 110 and 74 kDa from N18 cells intrinsically labeled with [35S]methionine. N18 cells grow with two phenotypes in culture, and immunoprecipitation of 125I-surface-labeled cells showed that the 74-kDa protein was present on loosely adherent cells growing in aggregates, while the 110-kDa protein was present in smaller amounts on firmly adherent cells growing as a monolayer. Analysis of brain cells from newborn mice by flow cytometry showed that all cells expressed the receptor protein at birth, but by 4 days after birth half of the cells had ceased receptor expression. A survey of other cell lines showed the protein to be present on murine fibroblastic and other rodent
neuroblastoma
cell lines but rarely on human neural or nonneural cell lines. These studies suggest that one of the receptors for Sindbis virus on mouse neural cells is a protein that is regulated during development of the nervous system. Developmental down-regulation of receptor protein expression may contribute to the age-dependent nature of susceptibility of mice to fatal alphavirus encephalitis.
...
PMID:Identification of a putative alphavirus receptor on mouse neural cells. 165 82
Hybrid cell lines derived from neonatal rat dorsal root ganglia neurons fused with the mouse
neuroblastoma
N18Tg2 exhibit sensory neuron-like properties not displayed by the parental
neuroblastoma
. These properties include an inward (depolarizing) current with a conductance increase in response to activation of a bradykinin receptor, an inward (depolarizing) current with a conductance increase in response to the sensory excitotoxin capsaicin, the expression of sensory neuropeptides (substance P, CGRP and somatostatin), the expression of phosphatidylinositol-anchored molecules including adhesion molecules of the immunoglobulin superfamily that can be regulated in serum-free culture by nerve growth factor (N-CAM, F-3 and Thy-1), and low permissivity to herpes simplex
virus infection
. These lines thus provide appropriate models for the study of mechanisms involved in nociceptor activation and the regulation of expression of sensory-neuron specific markers including neuropeptides.
...
PMID:Novel cell lines display properties of nociceptive sensory neurons. 197 43
MS is among the infectious agents known to persistently infect cells of the CNS. Clones NS20/Y and NS20/MS persistently infected with MS, both originating from the C1300 mouse
neuroblastoma
, were used. Multiple effects of the MS infection on the neuronal cell communication, expression of protooncogenes tumorigenicity and on the presence of immunoregulatory molecules were studied. Our results demonstrate that the level of the MHC class I and II antigens and beta-2 microglobulin was elevated in the MS infected cells. Furthermore, MS infection results in the significant increase of protein kinase C (PKC) activity concomitantly with the elevation of PKC-I specific m-RNA. The MS infection was found to affect also the expression of the protooncogenes known to associate with the PKC signaling system. Thus, the level of c-fos mRNA was elevated in the MS infected cells, while there were almost no changes in the c-myc gene expression. Ki-ras and Ha-ras appeared to be regulated differently by MS infection. The level of Ki-ras mRNA was unchanged, but the expression of the Ha-ras gene was markedly depressed, correlating well with the low tumorigenicity of the MS infected
neuroblastoma
cells in nude mice. Our results suggest that
viral infection
may be beneficial in certain cases of depressing oncogenic genes which may contribute to the development and maintenance of the malignant phenotype.
...
PMID:Regulatory effects of persistent measles virus infection on tumorigenicity and protooncogene expression in neuroblastoma cells. 205 60
Three cases of spontaneous olfactory
neuroblastoma
(ONB) in domestic cats were morphologically and immunocytochemically characterized. Diagnostic light microscopic features included Flexner and Homer-Wright rosettes, while ultrastructurally the cells had neuritic processes, intracellular intermediate filaments, and intercellular junctions. Immunocytochemically, the tumors stained positively for neuron-specific enolase, cytokeratins, and S-100 protein antigens. In each case, a key finding was the identification of numerous mature type C retroviral particles within the tumors. In one case, budding of viral particles from the plasmalemma of tumor cells suggested the source of mature particles. This cat and one other were tested, and both were serologically positive for feline leukemia virus (FeLV). The virus in the tumors was identified as FeLV by polymerase chain reaction and immunocytochemistry. No other neoplasms were found in any of the cats, nor was there similar evidence of active
viral infection
in other non-tumor tissues, including the brain. Although the relationship between FeLV infection and ONB is uncertain, our findings indicate that FeLV should be investigated as an etiologic agent of ONB.
...
PMID:Type C retroviral expression in spontaneous feline olfactory neuroblastomas. 217 30
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