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  1. Chloride Intracellular Channel Protein 1 (CLIC1) Is a Critical Host Cellular Factor for Influenza A Virus Replication
  2. Mammalian Reoviruses: Propagation, Quantification, and Storage
  3. PSMA2 knockdown impacts expression of proteins involved in immune and cellular stress responses in human lung cells
  4. Infections of the Cerebellum
  5. Knocking down some cellular genes (HLA-A, HSPA5, IGFBP5, PSMA2) increases ZIka virus growth
  6. Current understanding of the airborne transmission of important viral animal pathogens in spreading disease
  7. Temporal proteomic analyses of human lung cells distinguish high pathogenicity influenza viruses and coronaviruses from low pathogenicity viruses
  8. Development and characterization of influenza M2 ectodomain and/or hemagglutinin stalk-based dendritic cell-targeting vaccines
  9. Influenza A Virus Uses PSMA2 for Downregulation of the NRF2-Mediated Oxidative Stress Response
  10. Zika Virus Infection of Sertoli Cells Alters Protein Expression Involved in Activated Immune and Antiviral Response Pathways, Carbohydrate Metabolism and Cardiovascular Disease
  11. Development and characterization of influenza M2 ectodomain and/or HA stalk-based DC-targeting vaccines for different influenza infections
  12. Slow Off-Rate Modified Aptamer (SOMAmer) Proteomic Analysis of Patient-Derived Malignant Glioma Identifies Distinct Cellular Proteomes
  13. Dose–response modelling of infectious animal diseases coupled with computational fluid dynamics: A simulation of airborne porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus
  14. Autophagy, Unfolded Protein Response, and Neuropilin-1 Cross-Talk in SARS-CoV-2 Infection: What Can Be Learned from Other Coronaviruses
  15. A Single Point Mutation, Asn16→Lys, Dictates the Temperature-Sensitivity of the Reovirus tsG453 Mutant
  16. Embryonic Origins of Virus-Induced Hearing Loss: Overview of Molecular Etiology
  17. Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (4th edition)1
  18. Identification of cellular proteins dysregulated by Zika virus infection
  19. Update on Proteomic approaches to uncovering virus-induced protein alterations and virus –host protein interactions during the progression of viral infection
  20. Zika Infection Disrupts Proteins Involved in the Neurosensory System
  21. ZIKV Infection Induces DNA Damage Response and Alters the Proteome of Gastrointestinal Cells
  22. Zika virus dysregulates human Sertoli cell proteins involved in spermatogenesis with little effect on tight junctions
  23. Autophagy Modulators Profoundly Alter the Astrocyte Cellular Proteome
  24. Aptamer Profiling of A549 Cells Infected with Low-Pathogenicity and High-Pathogenicity Influenza Viruses
  25. Lrrk2 alleles modulate inflammation during microbial infection of mice in a sex-dependent manner
  26. Influenza a virus-triggered autophagy decreases the pluripotency of human-induced pluripotent stem cells
  27. Zika Virus Infection Disrupts Astrocytic Proteins Involved in Synapse Control and Axon Guidance
  28. Generation and Characterization of Anti-Filovirus Nucleoprotein Monoclonal Antibodies
  29. Vero Cell Proteomic Changes Induced by Zika Virus Infection
  30. The roles of apoptosis, autophagy and unfolded protein response in arbovirus, influenza virus, and HIV infections
  31. The Effectiveness of Air Ionization in Reducing Bioaerosols and Airborne PRRS Virus in a Ventilated Space
  32. Global Interactomics Connect Nuclear Mitotic Apparatus Protein NUMA1 to Influenza Virus Maturation
  33. Serum‐reduced media impacts on cell viability and protein expression in human lung epithelial cells
  34. Comprehending a Killer: The Akt/mTOR Signaling Pathways Are Temporally High-Jacked by the Highly Pathogenic 1918 Influenza Virus
  35. Methods and approaches to disease mechanisms using systems kinomics
  36. Autophagy activation is required for influenza A virus-induced apoptosis and replication
  37. Viruses Produced From Cells
  38. Infections of the Cerebellum
  39. New use of an old drug: chloroquine reduces viral and ALT levels in HCV non-responders (a randomized, triple-blind, placebo-controlled pilot trial)
  40. Avian influenza viruses that cause highly virulent infections in humans exhibit distinct replicative properties in contrast to human H1N1 viruses
  41. Apoptosis, autophagy and unfolded protein response pathways in Arbovirus replication and pathogenesis
  42. Highly Pathogenic H5N1 and Novel H7N9 Influenza A Viruses Induce More Profound Proteomic Host Responses than Seasonal and Pandemic H1N1 Strains
  43. Differential Reovirus-Specific and Herpesvirus-Specific Activator Protein 1 Activation of Secretogranin II Leads to Altered Virus Secretion
  44. Comparative proteomic analyses of two reovirus T3D subtypes and comparison to T1L identifies multiple novel proteins in key cellular pathogenic pathways
  45. Quantification of the Host Response Proteome after Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 Infection
  46. Comparative proteomic analyses demonstrate enhanced interferon and STAT-1 activation in reovirus T3D-infected HeLa cells
  47. Suppression of influenza A virus replication in human lung epithelial cells by noncytotoxic concentrations bafilomycin A1
  48. Hepatitis B and C virus-induced hepatitis: Apoptosis, autophagy, and unfolded protein response
  49. Proteasomal Serine Hydrolases Are Up-Regulated by and Required for Influenza Virus Infection
  50. Reoviruses: Molecular Biology☆
  51. Knockdown of specific host factors protects against influenza virus-induced cell death
  52. Influenza A Infection of Primary Human Airway Epithelial Cells Up-Regulates Proteins Related to Purine Metabolism and Ubiquitin-Related Signaling
  53. Generation and characterization of a new panel of broadly reactive anti-NS1 mAbs for detection of influenza A virus
  54. Quantitative omics and its application to study virus-host interactions—a new frontier
  55. HeLa cell response proteome alterations induced by mammalian reovirus T3D infection
  56. Quantification of the Host Response Proteome after Mammalian Reovirus T1L Infection
  57. Transcriptomics and quantitative proteomics in virology
  58. Influenza Virus Induces Apoptosis via BAD-Mediated Mitochondrial Dysregulation
  59. Response of Primary Human Airway Epithelial Cells to Influenza Infection: A Quantitative Proteomic Study
  60. Influenza A Virus Replication In A549 Human Epithelial Cells Requires Activation Of Autophagy Pathways
  61. Medical Microbiology and Diagnosis in the “Omic” Era
  62. Fishing Beyond the Peer: Future Omic Analyses of Virus-Host Interactions
  63. Non-Biased Enrichment Does Not Improve Quantitative Proteomic Delineation of Reovirus T3D-Infected HeLa Cell Protein Alterations
  64. Activity based protein profiling to detect serine hydrolase alterations in virus infected cells
  65. Virus-triggered autophagy in viral hepatitis - possible novel strategies for drug development
  66. Quantitative proteomics of complex mixtures
  67. Reoviruses
  68. Quantitative Proteomic Analyses of Influenza Virus-Infected Cultured Human Lung Cells
  69. Conserved structure/function of the orthoreovirus major core proteins
  70. Avian Reoviruses: Propagation, Quantification, and Storage
  71. Growth and Maintenance of Quail Fibrosarcoma QM5 Cells
  72. Mammalian Reoviruses: Propagation, Quantification, and Storage
  73. Corrigendum to ‘Survival of enveloped and non-enveloped viruses on surfaces compared with other micro-organisms and impact of suboptimal disinfectant exposure [Journal of Hospital Infection 2008;69:368–376]’
  74. Survival of enveloped and non-enveloped viruses on surfaces compared with other micro-organisms and impact of suboptimal disinfectant exposure
  75. Characterization of a trypsin-dependent avian influenza H5N1-pseudotyped HIV vector system for high throughput screening of inhibitory molecules
  76. Assignment of avian reovirus temperature-sensitive mutant recombination groups E, F, and G to genome segments
  77. Reovirus Serotypes Elicit Distinctive Patterns of Recall Immunity in Humans
  78. Conformational changes accompany activation of reovirus RNA-dependent RNA transcription
  79. Avian reovirus L2 genome segment sequences and predicted structure/function of the encoded RNA-dependent RNA polymerase protein
  80. Genetic characterization of a new mammalian reovirus, type 2 Winnipeg (T2W)
  81. Reoviruses
  82. Intracellular ATP and total adenylate concentrations are critical predictors of reovirus productivity from Vero cells
  83. Sequences of avian reovirus M1, M2 and M3 genes and predicted structure/function of the encoded μ proteins
  84. High-resolution mass spectrometric mapping of reovirus digestion
  85. Infectious entry of reovirus cores into mammalian cells enhanced by transfection
  86. Assignment of avian reovirus temperature-sensitive mutant recombination groups B, C, and D to genome segments
  87. Enteric Virus Indicators: Reovirus Versus Poliovirus
  88. Avian Reovirus Temperature-Sensitive Mutant tsA12 Has a Lesion in Major Core Protein σA and Is Defective in Assembly
  89. Mycophenolic acid inhibits avian reovirus replication
  90. Inhibition of Reovirus by Mycophenolic Acid Is Associated with the M1 Genome Segment
  91. REOVIRUS TYPE 2 ISOLATED FROM CEREBROSPINAL FLUID
  92. Introduction to Virus Structure, Classification, Replication, and Hosts
  93. Reoviruses
  94. Digestion pattern of reovirus outer capsid protein σ3 determined by mass spectrometry
  95. Mammalian reovirus core protein µ2 initiates at the first start codon and is acetylated
  96. Avian Reovirus Major μ-Class Outer Capsid Protein Influences Efficiency of Productive Macrophage Infection in a Virus Strain-Specific Manner
  97. Generation and Genetic Characterization of Avian Reovirus Temperature-Sensitive Mutants
  98. Reovirus ςNS Protein Is Required for Nucleation of Viral Assembly Complexes and Formation of Viral Inclusions
  99. Application of a Serum-Free Medium for the Growth of Vero Cells and the Production of Reovirus
  100. A comparative analysis of Freon substitutes in the purification of reovirus and calicivirus
  101. Production of reovirus type-1 and type-3 from Vero cells grown on solid and macroporous microcarriers
  102. Absence of superinfection exclusion during asynchronous reovirus infections of mouse, monkey, and human cell lines
  103. Stoichiometry of Reovirus Structural Proteins in Virus, ISVP, and Core Particles
  104. Assembly of the reovirus outer capsid requires μ1/σ3 interactions which are prevented by misfolded σ3 protein in temperature-sensitive mutant tsG453
  105. Identification and characterization of a double-stranded RNA- reovirus temperature-sensitive mutant defective in minor core protein mu2
  106. The Reovirus Mutant tsA279 Has Temperature-Sensitive Lesions in the M2 and L2 Genes: The M2 Gene Is Associated with Decreased Viral Protein Production and Blockade in Transmembrane Transport
  107. Crystallization of the reovirus type 3 dearing core crystal packing is determined by the λ2 protein
  108. Organization of the sindbis virus nucleocapsid as revealed by bifunctional cross-linking agents
  109. Topological organization of Sindbis virus capsid protein in isolated nucleocapsids
  110. Evidence for a change in capsid morphology during Sindbis virus envelopment