All Stories

  1. Nuclear trafficking of the HIV-1 pre-integration complex depends on the ADAM10 intracellular domain
  2. Oligomerization of Clostridium perfringens Epsilon Toxin Is Dependent upon Caveolins 1 and 2
  3. Inhibition of Influenza A Virus Replication by Antagonism of a PI3K-AKT-mTOR Pathway Member Identified by Gene Trap Insertional Mutagenesis
  4. A Functional Role for ADAM10 in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type-1 Replication
  5. Gene-Trap Mutagenesis Identifies Mammalian Genes Contributing to Intoxication by Clostridium perfringens ε-Toxin
  6. Happy Accidents: Serendipity in Modern Medical Breakthroughs in the Twentieth Century
  7. Cellular Genetics of Host Susceptibility and Resistance to Virus Infection
  8. Effects of Transforming Growth Factor- α (TGF- α ) In Vitro and In Vivo on Reovirus Replication
  9. Mucosal T Cell Response to Reovirus
  10. A G 1 Cell Cycle Arrest Induced by Ligands of the Reovirus Type 3 Receptor Is Secondary to Inactivation of p21ras and Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase
  11. Mucosal Immunity to Reovirus Infection
  12. Pathogenesis of Reovirus Gastrointestinal and Hepatobiliary Disease
  13. Selective reovirus infection of murine hepatocarcinoma cells during cell division. A model of viral liver infection.
  14. Binding of type 3 reovirus by a domain of the sigma 1 protein important for hemagglutination leads to infection of murine erythroleukemia cells.
  15. Receptor utilization by reovirus type 3: distinct binding sites on thymoma and fibroblast cell lines result in differential compartmentalization of virions
  16. Protection of Neonatal Mice from Fatal Reovirus Infection by Immune Serum and Gut Derived Lymphocytes
  17. Synergism between hepatic injuries and a nonhepatotropic reovirus in mice. Enhanced hepatic infection and death.
  18. The reovirus-specific cytotoxic T cell response is not restricted to serotypically unique epitopes associated with the virus hemagglutinin
  19. Sequences of the cell-attachment sites of reovirus type 3 and its anti-idiotypic/antireceptor antibody: modeling of their three-dimensional structures.
  20. Reovirus type 1 and type 3 differ in their binding to isolated intestinal epithelial cells
  21. Reovirus serotype 1 binds to the basolateral membrane of intestinal epithelial cells
  22. Reovirus infection in adult mice: the virus hemagglutinin determines the site of intestinal disease
  23. EFFECT OF ENTERIC PRIMING WITH REOVIRUS AND LIPOIDAL AMINE ADJUVANT ON MUCOSAL LYMPHATIC TISSUE AND ANTI‐VIRAL IgA SECRETION*
  24. Molecular basis of reovirus neurovirulence: role of the M2 gene in avirulence.
  25. Intestinal M cells: a pathway for entry of reovirus into the host
  26. Molecular basis of reovirus virulence. Role of the M2 gene
  27. THE MOLECULAR BASIS OF REOVIRUS VIRULENCE
  28. Effect of Avridine on Enteric Antigen Uptake and Mucosal Immunity to Reovirus (1/Lang)