Persistent virus Infections represent an immunologlcal paradox, in that viruses persist in the face of normal immune responses. The classical serological studies on viruses causing acute Infections established a remarkable degree of antigen and structural uniformity within each virus type. The obvious exception has been Influenza which, because of changes in specific antigenic determinants, is able to generate a variety of antigenic variants which can elude the immune responses of hosts previously infected with slightly differing viruses. The phenomenon of high mutability and antigenic variation previously associated uniquely with influenza virus, appears to be a more general one. Recent studies indicate that many viruses, long thought to b...
Influenza A/H2N2 viruses caused a pandemic in 1957 and continued to circulate in humans until 1968. ...
Seventy-eight influenza A (H3N2) viruses isolated from a single epidemic in a semi-closed community ...
Most humans are repeatedly infected with new strains of influenza throughout their lifetime even tho...
It is now generally recognized that the influenza viruses include numerous different but related str...
BackgroundA single measles vaccination provides lifelong protection. No antigenic variants that esca...
Antigenic drift in the haemagglutinin (HA) molecule of influenza B viruses was studied with monoclon...
ABSTRACT The human antibody repertoire has an exceptionally large capacity to recognize new or chang...
All viruses mutate, but influenza remains highly unusual among infectious diseases in the rapid evol...
Seasonal influenza viruses cause substantial worldwide mortality and morbidity every year. The evolu...
markdownabstractInfluenza viruses escape antibody-mediated neutralization by accumulating amino acid...
Kong), and B/Lee/40] of influenza virus that infect man were studied. The results indicate that thes...
SummaryMeasles virus undergoes error-prone replication like other RNA viruses, but over time, it has...
In this paper we explore the consequences of a heterogeneous immune response in individuals on the e...
Antigenic drift, the sequential accumulation of substitutions that enable escape from population imm...
It is commonly believed that influenza epidemics arise through the incremental accumulation of viral...
Influenza A/H2N2 viruses caused a pandemic in 1957 and continued to circulate in humans until 1968. ...
Seventy-eight influenza A (H3N2) viruses isolated from a single epidemic in a semi-closed community ...
Most humans are repeatedly infected with new strains of influenza throughout their lifetime even tho...
It is now generally recognized that the influenza viruses include numerous different but related str...
BackgroundA single measles vaccination provides lifelong protection. No antigenic variants that esca...
Antigenic drift in the haemagglutinin (HA) molecule of influenza B viruses was studied with monoclon...
ABSTRACT The human antibody repertoire has an exceptionally large capacity to recognize new or chang...
All viruses mutate, but influenza remains highly unusual among infectious diseases in the rapid evol...
Seasonal influenza viruses cause substantial worldwide mortality and morbidity every year. The evolu...
markdownabstractInfluenza viruses escape antibody-mediated neutralization by accumulating amino acid...
Kong), and B/Lee/40] of influenza virus that infect man were studied. The results indicate that thes...
SummaryMeasles virus undergoes error-prone replication like other RNA viruses, but over time, it has...
In this paper we explore the consequences of a heterogeneous immune response in individuals on the e...
Antigenic drift, the sequential accumulation of substitutions that enable escape from population imm...
It is commonly believed that influenza epidemics arise through the incremental accumulation of viral...
Influenza A/H2N2 viruses caused a pandemic in 1957 and continued to circulate in humans until 1968. ...
Seventy-eight influenza A (H3N2) viruses isolated from a single epidemic in a semi-closed community ...
Most humans are repeatedly infected with new strains of influenza throughout their lifetime even tho...