Background: The ongoing global efforts to control influenza epidemics and pandemics require high-throughput technologies to detect, quantify, and functionally characterize viral isolates. The 2009 influenza pandemic as well as the recent in-vitro selection of highly transmissible H5N1 variants have only increased existing concerns about emerging influenza strains with significantly enhanced human-to-human transmissibility. High-affinity binding of the virus hemagglutinin to human receptor glycans is a highly sensitive and stringent indicator of host adaptation and virus transmissibility. The surveillance of receptor-binding characteristics can therefore provide a strong additional indicator for the relative hazard imposed by circulating an...
Abstract Influenza A viruses, members of the Orthomyx-oviridae family, are responsible for annual se...
Influenza viruses attach to host cells by binding to terminal sialic acid (Neu5Ac) on glycoproteins ...
[[abstract]]The carbohydrate binding specificities are different among avian and human influenza A v...
[[abstract]]Aims: The outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 in poultry and the influenz...
ABSTRACT: We have developed a panel of synthetic glycans as receptor mimics for the specific capture...
A key step leading to influenza viral infection is the highly specific binding of a viral spike prot...
A new technologies are required for rapid surveillance of the current highly pathogenic H5N1 avian i...
A key step leading to influenza viral infection is the highly specific binding of a viral spike prot...
Sialic acids (SA) usually linked to galactose (Gal) in an α2,6- or α2,3-configuration ar...
Influenza A viruses are rapidly evolving pathogens with the potential for novel strains to emerge an...
Influenza A virus (IAV) hemagglutinins recognize sialic acids on the cell surface as functional rece...
ABSTRACT: We have developed a panel of synthetic glycans as receptor mimics for the specific capture...
Influenza virus mutates quickly and unpredictably creating emerging pathogenic strains that are diff...
<div><p>In the context of recently emerged novel influenza strains through reassortment, avian influ...
Abstract: Influenza viruses are found in wide range of animals, including humans, in nature. When av...
Abstract Influenza A viruses, members of the Orthomyx-oviridae family, are responsible for annual se...
Influenza viruses attach to host cells by binding to terminal sialic acid (Neu5Ac) on glycoproteins ...
[[abstract]]The carbohydrate binding specificities are different among avian and human influenza A v...
[[abstract]]Aims: The outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 in poultry and the influenz...
ABSTRACT: We have developed a panel of synthetic glycans as receptor mimics for the specific capture...
A key step leading to influenza viral infection is the highly specific binding of a viral spike prot...
A new technologies are required for rapid surveillance of the current highly pathogenic H5N1 avian i...
A key step leading to influenza viral infection is the highly specific binding of a viral spike prot...
Sialic acids (SA) usually linked to galactose (Gal) in an α2,6- or α2,3-configuration ar...
Influenza A viruses are rapidly evolving pathogens with the potential for novel strains to emerge an...
Influenza A virus (IAV) hemagglutinins recognize sialic acids on the cell surface as functional rece...
ABSTRACT: We have developed a panel of synthetic glycans as receptor mimics for the specific capture...
Influenza virus mutates quickly and unpredictably creating emerging pathogenic strains that are diff...
<div><p>In the context of recently emerged novel influenza strains through reassortment, avian influ...
Abstract: Influenza viruses are found in wide range of animals, including humans, in nature. When av...
Abstract Influenza A viruses, members of the Orthomyx-oviridae family, are responsible for annual se...
Influenza viruses attach to host cells by binding to terminal sialic acid (Neu5Ac) on glycoproteins ...
[[abstract]]The carbohydrate binding specificities are different among avian and human influenza A v...