It’s not easy to make the 2009 H1N1 influenza virus a killer
…the PB1-F2 protein has any effect on the virulence of the 2009 pandemic virus. Hai, R., Schmolke, M., Varga, Z., Manicassamy, B., Wang, T., Belser, J., Pearce, M., Garcia-Sastre, A.,…
…the PB1-F2 protein has any effect on the virulence of the 2009 pandemic virus. Hai, R., Schmolke, M., Varga, Z., Manicassamy, B., Wang, T., Belser, J., Pearce, M., Garcia-Sastre, A.,…
…a reality. Wang TT, Tan GS, Hai R, Pica N, Petersen E, Moran TM, & Palese P (2010). Broadly protective monoclonal antibodies against H3 influenza viruses following sequential immunization with…
…viruses would not be able to multiply. Therefore, viruses are not living things. When a virus encounters a cell, a series of chemical reactions occur that lead to the production…
…to spread among mice. There are other reasons to believe that such engineered viruses would not do well in nature. We’ll consider them in the next installment of this series….
…equivalent to 32 – 64 HA units. Then they prepared two-fold dilutions of each serum to be tested, and added each dilution series along a row of wells. Finally, they…
…usually not found in the cytoplasm of unifected cells; rather they are typically products of viral replication. When RIG-I binds these viral RNAs, a series of reactions occur which lead…