Status of arenavirus vaccines and their application. (73/188)

A limited but definite need exists for vaccines against Lassa, Junin, and Machupo viruses. Medical and laboratory personnel, as well as defined high-risk population groups, require protection from these highly virulent agents. To date little work has been done on inactivated vaccines for these viruses. A live attenuated Junin vaccine has been tested successfully in more than 600 persons, and a high-passage Machupo virus strain has protected rhesus monkeys against lethal infection produced by a homologous field strain.Work has been initiated on possible heterologous protection induced by infection or antigenic stimulation with arenaviruses not pathogenic for man. Crucial for the eventual development of effective vaccines are the construction of more maximum security laboratories and the further elucidation of the experimental and natural biology of the agents in lower animals and man.  (+info)

Different mechanisms of cell entry by human-pathogenic Old World and New World arenaviruses. (74/188)

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Bacterial-based systems for expression and purification of recombinant Lassa virus proteins of immunological relevance. (75/188)

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Mutational evidence for a structural model of the Lassa virus RNA polymerase domain and identification of two residues, Gly1394 and Asp1395, that are critical for transcription but not replication of the genome. (76/188)

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Safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of the ML29 reassortant vaccine for Lassa fever in small non-human primates. (77/188)

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Inhibition of Lassa and Marburg virus production by tetherin. (78/188)

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Uncoupling GP1 and GP2 expression in the Lassa virus glycoprotein complex: implications for GP1 ectodomain shedding. (79/188)

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Characterization of Lassa virus cell entry and neutralization with Lassa virus pseudoparticles. (80/188)

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