Disease | encephalitis |
Phenotype | C0014078|venezuelan equine encephalitis |
Sentences | 25 |
PubMedID- 24349588 | Strobe checklist manuscript pntd-d-13-00682r1 “venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses (veev) in argentina: serological evidence of human infection”. |
PubMedID- 20644615 | A side view of one e2 molecule with the approximate location of venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) e2 peptide 13 (amino acids 241–265) shown in black. |
PubMedID- 23966852 | Tonv is closely related to venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev), and like its relative also causes fatal encephalitis in humans [20]. |
PubMedID- 20520794 | Arboviruses have the potential to rapidly change their host associations, as illustrated by the rapid emergence of epizootic venezuelan equine encephalitis virus following virus adaptation to an alternative vector through a single amino acid substitution in the envelope glycoprotein [70]. |
PubMedID- 25853113 | Mosquito borne diseases such as malaria, dengue, venezuelan equine encephalitis (vee), west nile virus and others equine encephalitis, mayaro, or chikungunya are zoonoses with increasing incidence in the current decade in tropical and temperate countries. |
PubMedID- 23170168 | A venezuelan equine encephalitis (vee) replicon particle (vrp) vaccine encoding ebov gp was reported to be the most successful of the six structural proteins tested (gp, np, vp24, vp30, vp35, and vp40) in mice, and vrp encoding marv gp is sufficient to completely protect rodents and nonhuman primates against marv [66,102,103,104,105]. |
PubMedID- 22695180 | Other studies have used venezuelan equine encephalitis virus-based ebov vaccines to identify the h-2d- or h-2b-restricted ctl epitopes in ebov gp, np, vp24, vp30, vp35 and vp40 [33,34]. |
PubMedID- 23133685 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) has been responsible for hundreds of thousands of human and equine cases of severe disease in the americas. |
PubMedID- 26399854 | Furthermore, among the species of medical importance are mansonia titillans, which is vector of venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (vee), it was the primary vector for the 1942–1943 epidemic in trinidad. |
PubMedID- 22666347 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) belongs to the alphavirus genus within the togaviridae family and was first isolated from horses in the 1930s [1], [2]. |
PubMedID- 22509419 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) is transmitted to humans and horses by mosquitoes in mexico, central and south america. |
PubMedID- 20202445 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis (vee) is an emerging zoonotic disease in the amazon region of peru. |
PubMedID- 20976195 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) is a new world alphavirus that was first identified in venezuela in 1938. |
PubMedID- 21529366 | Neurovirulent venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) is a member of the genus alphavirus, in the family togaviridae. |
PubMedID- 24745008 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis (vee) virus replicon particles (vrps) have been used as vectors to express nvcps in bhk cells, resulting in the production of nvlps with yields of approximately 1010 partially purified particles per ml [51]. |
PubMedID- 26528487 | Recently, replicons derived from venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (vee) and expressing reprogramming genes were shown to support ips formation.43 to ensure safety after obtaining the intended biological effect, eradication of the reprogramming replicon is expected and could be triggered by use of cell-fate specific mirna.46 nevertheless, a case-by-case analysis could be useful to evaluate the innate immune response of the target cells, since it could block replication of the replicon.47 for example, we were unsuccessful in expressing reporter genes from an hcv-replicon transferred by ms2rlp in primary human msc (data not shown). |
PubMedID- 23675542 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev), a positive-strand rna arbovirus and member of the alphavirus genus in the togaviridae family, is one of the most pathogenic mosquito-borne viruses circulating in south and central america [2]. |
PubMedID- 26317509 | The venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) dna plasmid replicon (pvrep) was constructed using overlap pcr to fuse the 5’ end of the trinidad donkey strain replicon vector, pvr21 [42,43] to the estimated rna transcriptional start sequence of the cytomegalovirus immediate early gene promoter in the pcmv-tag cloning vector (agilent technologies). |
PubMedID- 21466707 | Ebola virus, rotavirus, venezuelan equine encephalitis virus, sindbis virus, and marburg virus are shown to prevent the nuclear translocation and phosphorylation of stat1, resulting in the impairment of the ifn α-dependent antiviral effect [20-23]. |
PubMedID- 26020513 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis (vee) virus (veev), an arbovirus with a wide geographic distribution across north, central and south america, causes periodic outbreaks in human and equine populations as well as endemic disease following spillover from enzootic transmission cycles [1]. |
PubMedID- 21529382 | There is also evidence that an snp enabled venezuelan equine encephalitis virus to jump vectors, sparking the 1993 epidemic in mexico (6), and it might have been an snp in west nile virus that increased its virulence to birds and influenced the shape of the epidemic in the united states (7). |
PubMedID- 21829169 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) is a mosquito-borne viral pathogen that has caused periodic, extensive outbreaks of human and equine diseases throughout the americas, including in texas (weaver et al, 2004). |
PubMedID- 22286376 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) is a mosquito-borne and aerosol-transmitted infection of horses (in which the virus multiplies) that presents an emerging zoonotic disease threat to humans, and is in addition a potential biological weapon. |
PubMedID- 24204271 | Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (vee) is an alphavirus that can be used as a vaccine expression vector in which the genes coding for the structural proteins are replaced by one or more transgenes [16]. |
PubMedID- 20706628 | While severe disease can result, such as hemorrhagic manifestations (denv and yellow fever virus [yfv]) or neurological disease (wnv, jev, and venezuelan equine encephalitis virus [veev]), arbovirus infection typically results in mild to moderate febrile illness [2], [5], [6]. |
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