Viral attachment to target cells is the first step in infection and also serves as a determinant of tropism. Like many viruses, mammalian reoviruses bind with low affinity to cell-surface carbohydrate receptors to initiate the infectious process. Reoviruses disseminate with serotype-specific tropism in the host, which may be explained by differential glycan utilization. Although a2,3-linked sialylated oligosaccharides serve as carbohydrate receptors for type 3 reoviruses, neither a specific glycan bound by any reovirus serotype nor the function of glycan binding in type 1 reovirus infection was known. We have identified the oligosaccharide portion of ganglioside GM2 (the GM2 glycan) as a receptor for the attachment protein s1 of reovirus st...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Viral infections are initiated by attachment of the virus to host cell surface receptors, including ...
<div><p>Viruses within a family often vary in their cellular tropism and pathogenicity. In many case...
<div><p>Viral attachment to target cells is the first step in infection and also serves as a determi...
ABSTRACT Receptors expressed on the host cell surface adhere viruses to target cells and serve as de...
<p>(<b>A</b>) Glycan microarray analysis of recombinant T1L σ1<sub>short</sub> using 21 lipid-linked...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Carbohydrate microarrays have emerged as powerful tools in analyses of microbe-host interactions. Us...
Human norovirus infections are the most common cause of acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis in humans...
The first step of viral infection requires interaction with the host cell. Before finding the specif...
<div><p>Murine polyomavirus (MuPyV) causes tumors of various origins in newborn mice and hamsters. I...
Viral infection is an intricate process that requires the concerted action of both viral and host ce...
Viral infection is an intricate process that requires the concerted action of both viral and host ce...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Viral infections are initiated by attachment of the virus to host cell surface receptors, including ...
<div><p>Viruses within a family often vary in their cellular tropism and pathogenicity. In many case...
<div><p>Viral attachment to target cells is the first step in infection and also serves as a determi...
ABSTRACT Receptors expressed on the host cell surface adhere viruses to target cells and serve as de...
<p>(<b>A</b>) Glycan microarray analysis of recombinant T1L σ1<sub>short</sub> using 21 lipid-linked...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Carbohydrate microarrays have emerged as powerful tools in analyses of microbe-host interactions. Us...
Human norovirus infections are the most common cause of acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis in humans...
The first step of viral infection requires interaction with the host cell. Before finding the specif...
<div><p>Murine polyomavirus (MuPyV) causes tumors of various origins in newborn mice and hamsters. I...
Viral infection is an intricate process that requires the concerted action of both viral and host ce...
Viral infection is an intricate process that requires the concerted action of both viral and host ce...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Attachment of viruses to cell-surface receptors is the initial step in infection. Many mammalian vir...
Viral infections are initiated by attachment of the virus to host cell surface receptors, including ...
<div><p>Viruses within a family often vary in their cellular tropism and pathogenicity. In many case...