All Stories

  1. Human Cytomegalovirus nuclear egress and secondary envelopment are negatively affected in the absence of cellular p53
  2. The absence of p53 during Human Cytomegalovirus infection leads to decreased UL53 expression, disrupting UL50 localization to the inner nuclear membrane, and thereby inhibiting capsid nuclear egress
  3. Infection of a Single Cell Line with Distinct Strains of Human Cytomegalovirus Can Result in Large Variations in Virion Production and Facilitate Efficient Screening of Virus Protein Function
  4. Modulation of Homology-Directed Repair in T98G Glioblastoma Cells Due to Interactions between Wildtype p53, Rad51 and HCMV IE1-72
  5. Maintenance of Large Numbers of Virus Genomes in Human Cytomegalovirus-Infected T98G Glioblastoma Cells
  6. Use of Diploid Human Fibroblasts as a Model System to Culture, Grow, and Study Human Cytomegalovirus Infection
  7. Stimulation of Homology-Directed Repair at I-SceI-Induced DNA Breaks during the Permissive Life Cycle of Human Cytomegalovirus
  8. The Presence of p53 Influences the Expression of Multiple Human Cytomegalovirus Genes at Early Times Postinfection
  9. Neonatal Neural Progenitor Cells and Their Neuronal and Glial Cell Derivatives Are Fully Permissive for Human Cytomegalovirus Infection
  10. Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and hearing impairment: Infection of fibroblast cells with HCMV induces chromosome breaks at 1q23.3, between loci DFNA7 and DFNA49—Both involved in dominantly inherited, sensorineural, hearing impairment
  11. Long-Term Infection and Shedding of Human Cytomegalovirus in T98G Glioblastoma Cells
  12. Potential Role for p53 in the Permissive Life Cycle of Human Cytomegalovirus
  13. An intact sequence-specific DNA-binding domain is required for human cytomegalovirus-mediated sequestration of p53 and may promote in vivo binding to the viral genome during infection
  14. Bromodeoxyuridine-Labeled Viral Particles as a Tool for Visualization of the Immediate-Early Events of Human Cytomegalovirus Infection
  15. Infection of Cells with Human Cytomegalovirus during S Phase Results in a Blockade to Immediate-Early Gene Expression That Can Be Overcome by Inhibition of the Proteasome
  16. Viral induction of site-specific chromosome damage
  17. Exploitation of cellular signaling and regulatory pathways by human cytomegalovirus
  18. Specific chromosome 1 breaks induced by human cytomegalovirus
  19. Regulation of Human Cytomegalovirus Gene Expression
  20. Analysis of spontaneous and double-strand break-induced recombination in rad mutants of S. pombe
  21. Large T-Antigen and Sequences within the Regulatory Region of JC Virus Both Contribute to the Features of JC Virus DNA Replication