Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0038362 (stomatitis)
8,852 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The capacity of interferon to inhibit virus production in cells chronically infected with oncornavirus enabled us to develop a simple system for interferon quantitation that was independent of exogenous viral infection. The release of the virus to the culture medium was determined by its reverse transcriptase activity. The inhibitory effect of interferon in this system was linearly proportional to the log of its dilution over a range between 5 and 80% inhibiton. The sensitivity of the system was comparable to that of the vexicular stomatitis virus plaque reduction assay, whereas its reproducibility was found to be even better. This method is very rapid and can be completed within less than 24 h.
...
PMID:Rapid quantitation of interferon with chronically oncornavirus-producing cells. 6 Nov 74

A simple and rapid plaque procedure was developed for the assay of hog cholera virus (HCV) of a particular strain, GPE-, based on its intrinsic interference with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) on the primary swine testicle cells and on an established swine kidney cell line; the procedure is called the reverse plaque formation (RPF) method. The plaques were produced as colonies of HCV-infected cells which were VSV-sensitive, disintegrated cell sheet. These plaques became visible after 15 to 20 h of superinfection with VSV done 2 days after an initial inoculation of the GPE- strain. The plaque formation was inhibited by a specific antiserum against HCV. All cells within the plaque had HCV antigen detectable by fluorescent-antibody staining. The variations of reverse plaque count were low enough to permit virus titration. The relationship between virus concentration and the number of plaques was essentially linear. The titer measured by the RPF method was a little higher than that of the tube culture interference method.
...
PMID:Reverse plaque formation by hog cholera virus of the GPE-strain inducing heterologous interference. 6 Nov 76

Mixed infection of Vero cells with measles and vesicular stomatitis viruses gives rise to phenotypically mixed infections virus particles possessing the properties of pseudotypes. Similar results were obtained when vesicular stomatitis virus was used to superinfect a defective measles system.
...
PMID:Vesicular stomatitis virus (measles) pseudotypes: tool for demonstrating defective measles infections. 6 Nov 89

The process of maturation of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) results in the loss of 70% of the H-2k antigenic activity from L-cell plasma membranes. This phenomenon is also demonstrated during VSV infection of cells of the H-2d haplotype. Using the method of inhibition of immune cytolysis, VSV-infected L5178Y tissue culture cells and VSV-infected METH A fibrosarcoma cells grown in vivo show a loss of H-2d activity of 73 and 76%, respectively. Using monospecific antisera, it is seen that VSV infection results in a significant loss of antigenic activity of the gene products of both the H-2D and H-2K regions in cells of the H-2d and H-2k haplotypes. In hybrid cells expressing H-2k as well as H-2b, VSV infection results in the decrease of both H-2 antigenic activities to the same extent. VSV purified from L cells shows considerable H-2k activity, but the reaction of this virus with anti-H-2k serum does not prevent a normal subsequent infection with this virus. VSV may associate with H-2 antigen in the culture medium, but the results of mixing VSV with uninfected H-2-containing homogenates suggest that this association occurs only when the host cell and the cell homogenate share the same H-2 haplotype. Velocity sedimentation of VSV, which would remove contaminating cellular membrane fragments, does not separate H-2 activity from VSV. H-2 activity is also stably associated with VSV throughout sequential sucrose gradient centrifugation steps. It is possible that H-2 antigen is a structural component of VSV grown in murine cells.
...
PMID:Interactions of vesicular stomatitis virus with murine cell surface antigens. 6 Dec 85

Virus plaque-forming cell assay with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), which had been originally introduced by Bloom and his colleagues as a tool for the enumeration of activated lymphocytes, was first applied to the immune response of mice to a widely used antigen, i.e. sheep red blood cells (SRBC). When spleen cells taken from mice previously primed with SRBC were cultured in the presence of the antigen, lymphocytes capable of replicating VSV (antigen-induced virus plaque-forming cells, Ag-V-PFC) were generated in the culture. They seemed to appear as early as 1 day of culture, and the peak was attained by the 2nd day. Most of Ag-V-PFC belonged to T-cell population, since 80-90% of Ag-V-PFC was killed by the treatment of cultured cells with anti-thymocyte serum plus complement. In vitro generation of Ag-V-PFC seemed to be highly cross-reactive (about 40%) with a related antigen (horse red blood cells). Ag-V-PFC detected in the present experiment may not represent helper T cells, effector T cells, or their precursors because of the following: (a) The generation of Ag-V-PFC was completely suppressed by the addition of anti-SRBC mouse serum in the culture, though the helper activity was apparently augmented by the same treatment. (b) Development of Ag-V-PFC was almost completely suppressed by the pretreatment of mice with cyclophosphamide 2 days before immunization, by which delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) was markedly augmented. (c) After the immunization of mice, Ag-V-PFC began to develop just when the level of DTH declined, at which point helper activity of the spleen cells also diminished. A possible role of Ag-V-PFC in the immune response was discussed.
...
PMID:Virus-replicating T cells in the immune response of mice. I. Virus plaque assay of the lymphocytes reactive to sheep erythrocytes. 6 84

Chinese hamster ovary cells cultured in the presence of phenethyl alcohol exhibit obvious changes in cell surface galactose and galactosamine glycoproteins as determined by the galactose-oxidase[3H]borohydride technique and SDS gel electrophoresis. Cells pretreated with phenethyl alcohol (drug was removed before infection) were not as effective as hosts for vesicular stomatitis virus as untreated cultures. A minimum pretreatment time with 0.1% phenethyl alcohol of about 8 h was required before a reduction in virus growth was observed. It is proposed that phenethyl alcohol pretreatment as outlined in this report leads to a modification of the host cellular membrane resulting in the inhibition of virus replication.
...
PMID:Pretreatment of hamster cells with phenethyl alcohol alters cell surface glycoproteins and inhibits vesicular stomatitis virus growth. 6 7

Histocompatibility antigens on the surface of human lymphoblastoid cells were quantified by a microadsorption technique. During the course of measles virus infection, no quantitative or qualitations in surface HLA antigens were observed. In contrast, infection with poliovirus type 1 or vesicular stomatitis virus, or treatment with puromycin (50 microgram/ml) resulted in a significant decrease in surface HLA. These experiments suggest that an inhibition of host protein synthesis rather than the insertion of virus-specificied antigens into the membrane results in a net decrease in amounts of this cell surface antigen. The HLA antigens also appear to be both functionally and structurally distinct from measles virus surface antigens. Pretreatment of cells with HLA-directed antibody did not prevent the infection of these cells by measles virus, thus HLA antigens appear unrelated to the measles virus receptor site on the plasma membrane. Electron microscopic studies revealed that measles virus maturation occurs at membrane sites devoid of demonstrable HLA. Furthermore, HLA antigens could not be detected on the surfaces of mature infectious virions.
...
PMID:Human histocompatibility determinants and virus antigens: effect of measles virus infection on HLA expression. 6 89

Forty-three patients with disseminated germ cell cancer were treated with a combination of vincristine, Adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, actinomycin-D, and medroxyprogesterone acetate. All the 43 patients were considered evaluable for response. Thirty-one patients (72%) achieved a complete or partial remission and 14 (32.5%) achieved a complete remission. The patients who attained an objective response obtained a significant prolongation of life compared with the nonresponders (median survival 55 vs. 23 weeks). Responses were seen in all histologic categories and most frequently in patients with metastases confined to the lungs. The major side effects were leukopenia and stomatitis. There were no deaths related to toxicity of the chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Combination chemotherapy of germ cell tumors of the testis with vincristine, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, actinomycin D and medroxyprogesterone acetate. 7 Feb 66

Highly purified vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) was obtained from VSV-infected SV40-transformed hamster cell lines. Immunization with this virus protected hamsters against challenge with SV40-transformed cells (TSV5-cl2). This protection was obtained regardless of the source of the SV40-transformed cells (e.g. cat, rat, hamster) used to produce VSV, and was therefore associated with the SV40 tumor-specific transplantation antigen (SV40-TSTA). Furthermore, when grown on spontaneously transformed cell lines or on cells transformed by a different oncogenic DNA virus, such as polyoma virus, the VSV failed to protect against the SV40-induced tumor. It was concluded that the SV40-TSTA activity of purified VSV is due to the incorporation of SV40-TSTA within the viral envelope. When VSV was treated with proteolytic enzymes (bromelain, trypsin) no loss of TSTA-induced tumor rejection was observed, although VSV had lost its ability to induce virus-neutralizing antibody. This clearly demonstrates that the TSTA activity is not related to the viral spikes. Phospholipase C suppressed the TSTA activity but neutralizing activity was still detectable in the anti-VSV sera. The results presented here demonstrate that the protection afforded by VSV is highly specific. It is particularly interesting that SV40-TSTA activity may be conveyed by the lipid core of the viral envelope.
...
PMID:SV40 tumor rejection induced by vesicular stomatitis virus bearing SV40 tumor-specific transplantation antigen (SV40-TSTA). I. Specificity of immunoprotection and effect of enzyme treatment on TSTA activity. 7 Dec 74

Highly purified vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) was obtained from VSV-infected SV40-transformed and from "normal" hamster cell lines. A glycolipid extract was prepared from these VSV preparations according to the Folch partition procedure. These glycolipids were rendered immunogenic to the Syrian hamsters when incorporated within liposomal membranes composed of lecithin/sphingomyelin/cholesterol (1/1/2 by weight). When the glycolipids were extracted from VSV grown on cell lines (TSV5-cl2 and EHSVi-cl1) which contained the SV40 tumor-specific transplantation antigen (SV40-TSTA), it was possible either to induce a tumor rejection or at least to slow the growth of the tumor in Syrian hamsters challenged with TSV5-cl2 cells. No protection was obtained in animals treated with liposomes containing glycolipids extracted from purified VSV grown on SV40-TSTA-negative cells (EHB). The SV40-TSTA could be a glycolipid of the transformed cell membrane which is incorporated within the VSV envelope.
...
PMID:SV40 tumor rejection induced by vesicular stomatitis virus bearing SV40 tumor-specific transplantation antigen (SV40-TSTA). II. Association of SV40-TSTA activity with liposomes containing VSV glycolipids. 7 Dec 75


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>