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

The increased use of serotype 2 Marek's disease virus (MDV) and serotype 3 turkey herpesvirus (HVT) as components of effective bivalent vaccines against Marek's disease (MD) prompted studies on the possible interactions of these two viruses in vitro and in vivo. The replication of the SB-1 strain of MDV was compared with replication of the FC126/2 strain of HVT in chickens and cell cultures infected with one or both viruses. Replication of MDV was reduced in the presence of HVT in both in vitro and in vivo systems. MDV plaque counts in dually infected chicken embryo fibroblast cultures inoculated with tissue-culture-propagated viruses were reduced by up to 91%; however, no inhibition was noted when inocula consisted of virus-infected buffy-coat cells. Plaque formation by MDV in chicken embryo fibroblast cultures was inhibited by virus-free conditioned medium from HVT-infected cultures. This conditioned medium also inhibited growth of vesicular stomatitis virus in a standard interferon assay. In chickens inoculated with both MDV and HVT, MDV viremia titers were lower and the dose required to infect 50% of susceptible chickens was increased 13-fold compared with chickens inoculated with MDV alone. In spite of these findings, there was no evidence that high concentrations of HVT interfered with either the ability of MDV to induce protective synergism in vivo or the protective efficacy of bivalent vaccines. No reciprocal inhibitory effects of MDV on the replication of HVT in vivo or in vitro were noted.
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PMID:Partial inhibition by turkey herpesvirus of serotype 2 Marek's disease virus plaque formation and in vivo infectivity. 770 14

Sf9, the insect cell line commonly used for gene expression by recombinant baculovirus (BV), can be infected by St. Louis encephalitis (SLE) virus, a flavivirus, resulting in a persistent, productive, and cytopathic infection, while retaining the ability to be infected with a recombinant baculovirus (rBV). We now demonstrate using double immunofluorescence that single cells are dually infected with SLE virus and rBV. Fourteen additional viruses including additional flaviviruses, other arbovirus classes, vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), and herpes simplex virus, type 1 (HSV-1) failed to produce a cytopathic effect (CPE) in Sf9 cells. Plaque assays indicated infectious virus was present for several weeks post-inoculation for Yellow fever (YF), Dengue types 1 and 2 (DEN-1 and DEN-2), Gumbo limbo (GL), Eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus (EEE), Western equine encephalomyelitis virus (WEE), HSV-1, and VSV viruses. For HSV-1, GL, EEE, WEE and VSV, but not for YF, DEN-1 or DEN-2 viruses, this could be attributed solely to survival in the Sf9 cell culture media. Of the 14 viruses tested, only HSV-1 could be detected after 2 weeks in serum-free media. The data indicate that several viruses which are pathogenic for humans are stable for long periods of time at 27 degrees C in the serum-containing media used for cultivation of Sf9 cells. YF, DEN-1 and DEN-2 viruses may replicate in Sf9 cells at extremely low levels. This suggests that adventitious agents which do not produce obvious CPE or interfere with rBV infection or recombinant protein expression could contaminate Sf9 cell cultures or media.
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PMID:Susceptibility of the Sf9 insect cell line to infection with adventitious viruses. 781 53

Plaque-periplaque areas from MS brain tissue were explanted and propagated in tissue culture. The same in vitro techniques that successfully rescued measles virus from SSPE brain, papovavirus from PML brain, and HSV from normal human trigeminal ganglia, were applied. MS brain cells were also inoculated into chimpanzees, multiple rodent species, and embryonated hens eggs. No neurologic disease developed in experimentally infected animals, and no cytopathic effect was observed in explanted cells, or after cocultivation or fusion of MS brain cells with indicator cells. Further analysis of explanted and cocultivated cells by indirect immunofluorescence with various antiviral antisera prepared against viruses associated with post-infectious encephalomyelitis, as well as antisera to other ubiquitous viruses, failed to detect viral antigen. Finally, attempts to detect a latent enveloped virus in MS brain cells by 'superinfecting' MS brain cells in culture with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) did not reveal a VSV non-neutralizable fraction. Nevertheless, since oligoclonal bands (OGBs) in the CSF of patients with chronic infectious diseases of the CNS are directed against the causative agent, it is likely that OGBs in MS CSF are antibody directed against the agent or antigen that triggered disease. Although the relevant antibody may be scarce relative to irrelevant antibody in MS CSF, and only small amounts of an MS-specific antigen may be present in brain, this report provides a rationale for strategies proposed in our companion report by Owens et al which will allow detection of an MS-specific antigen or its cognate RNA in brain.
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PMID:The search for virus in multiple sclerosis brain. 934 71

The interferon (IFN)-inducing capacity of different isolates of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) of the Indiana (IN) and New Jersey (NJ) serotypes were measured to assess the extent of variability of this phenotype. Over 200 preparations of wild-type field isolates, laboratory strains, and plaque-derived subpopulations were examined. Marked heterogeneity was found in the ability of these viruses to induce IFN, covering a 10,000-fold range. A good fit to a normal distribution for the log of the IFN yields suggests a continuum of incremental changes in the viral genome may govern the IFN-inducing capacity of consensus populations derived from independently arising infections. A broad range in the magnitude of these changes, skewed towards inducers of high IFN yields, is consistent with a comparable series of ribonucleotide changes in the VSV genome, a sine qua non of a quasispecies population. Plaque- or vesicle-derived populations displayed standard deviations less than the mean IFN yields, though skewed to higher yielders, whereas populations from field and laboratory samples which differed widely in time and origin of isolation gave standard deviations greater than the means. The plaque isolation of IFN-inducing particles of VSV-IN, normally masked in populations by the predominance of non-IFN-inducing particles that suppress IFN induction, and the isolation of potent wild-type IFN-inducing VSV-IN from cows during an outbreak of vesicular stomatitis in a region that had yielded only virus expressing the non-IFN-inducing phenotype in prior and subsequent years, supports the view that genetic bottlenecks are operative in the natural transmission of this disease.
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PMID:Interferon induction as a quasispecies marker of vesicular stomatitis virus populations. 942 Feb 57

A plasmid-based recovery system was used to generate four unique vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) mutants that encode glycoproteins (G proteins) with single or double amino acid substitutions in two conserved acidic residues adjacent to the putative G protein fusion domain. Previously we demonstrated that three of the mutant G proteins (D137-L, E139-L, and DE-SS) have slightly reduced pH thresholds for membrane fusion activity. In this report we show that even though the viruses encoding D137-L, E139-L, and DE-SS were recovered with high efficiency, these mutants were attenuated for growth in cell culture. Plaque formation was significantly delayed with these mutants and the plaques were smaller and more diffuse than those produced by wild type VSV. In addition, cells infected with these mutants produced approximately 5- to 10-fold less infectious virus than cells infected with a similarly recovered VSV encoding the wild-type G protein. Using R18-labeled virus we found that the mutant G proteins had approximately 50% of the fusion activity of wild-type G at pH 6.3 and only 75% activity at pH 5.8. We also show that the mutant viruses were more sensitive to chloroquine inhibition of infection than either wild-type VSV or the mutant E139-T, which has a fusion phenotype similar to wild-type G protein. Reduced fusion activity and attenuation of infectivity was not due to differences in the amount of G protein incorporated into virions, nor to differences in the amount of virus binding to cells at physiological pH. Although infectivity was assayed at neutral pH, we observed an increase in virus binding with both mutant and wild-type virions as the pH was lowered, and the increase in binding occurred near the pH threshold for membrane fusion activity. From these data we propose a model in which VSV entry involves an increase in virus binding to the inner leaflet of the endosomal membrane during endosome acidification. Concomitant with this higher affinity binding, G protein becomes primed to initiate fusion of the viral envelope with the endosomal membrane. Viruses with mutations that delay the onset of increased binding and fusion lag behind wild-type VSV in their ability to initiate a productive infection, potentially because the location within the cytoplasm where these viruses ultimately fuse is not optimal for either virus uncoating or replication of the viral genome.
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PMID:Attenuation of recombinant vesicular stomatitis viruses encoding mutant glycoproteins demonstrate a critical role for maintaining a high pH threshold for membrane fusion in viral fitness. 945 8

Rabies is a fatal anthropozoonotic viral infection of the central nervous system that remains a serious public health problem in many countries. As several animal cases of spontaneous survival to infection were reported and because type 1 interferons were shown to protect against the virus, it was suggested that innate resistance mechanisms exist. Among the antiviral proteins that are synthesized in response to interferon-alpha/beta stimulation, Mx proteins from several species are long known to block the replication of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). As both VSV and rabies virus belongs to the Rhabdoviridae family, this study was started with the aim to establish whether the anti-VSV activity of a mammalian Mx protein could be extended to rabies virus. This question was addressed by inoculating the virus onto a bovine Mx1 or human MxA-expressing Vero cell clone. Plaque formation was unambiguously blocked, and viral yields were reduced 100- to 1000-fold by bovine Mx1 expression for both SAG2 and SADB19 viral strains. In opposition, only SAG2 strain could be inhibited by the expression of human MxA protein. The effect of both proteins expression was then evaluated at the viral protein expression level. Again, boMx1 was able to repress protein expression in both strain, whereas only SAG2 proteins were inhibited in human MxA-expressing cells. These results suggest that protection conferred by interferon-alpha/beta against rabies could be, at least partially, attributable to the Mx pathway. Alternatively, bovine Mx1 could be unique in its ability to repress rabies virus which, if confirmed in vivo, would open an avenue for the development of new antirabies therapeutic strategies.
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PMID:Expression of the interferon-alpha/beta-inducible bovine Mx1 dynamin interferes with replication of rabies virus. 1620 17

Stomatitis is a common side effect during cancer chemotherapy. We hypothesized that careful oral cavity care using patient guidance and cleanliness index prevents stomatitis in cancer chemotherapy. We introduced oral care patient guidance including teaching good brushing methods, O'Leary's Plaque Control Record(PCR)as a cleanliness index, and Eilers' Oral Assessment Guide(OAG)as an overall index after April 2006. We evaluated the incidence of stomatitis in 20 patients(10 patients between April 2004 to May 2006 and 10 patients after April 2006)with esophageal cancer who received chemotherapy including 5-FU and CDDP. Patients receiving brushing training after 2006 were evaluated regarding cleanliness of their oral cavities using PCR index and OAG index. The rates of stomatitis were 60%(6/10)and 40%(4/10)before and after the introduction of oral care patient guidance. The average of PCR index decreased from 82% to 46% after teaching good brushing method to the patients. The average of OAG index after brushing training was 9.14 which was better score compared with previous reports. Introduction of oral care patient guidance decreased the incidence of stomatitis. Both PCR and OAG indexes were useful in evaluating the objective condition of the oral cavity and in sharing patients' information among a medical team. These indexes encouraged the patients to clean their oral cavities.
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PMID:[Efficacy of oral cavity care in preventing stomatitis (mucositis) in cancer chemotherapy]. 1929 70


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