Publications by authors named "Bykovsky A"

This review presents an information and proof evidence toward to the role of microvesicles, originating from the different sources pro- and eucaryotes in the initiation and development of persistence of several human and animal pathogens. Also an information about another properties of microvesicles, as well as the reference of role in the different somatic pathology, intercellular interaction and in the intracellular transport of biologically active macromolecules as well as life origin and evolutionary events.

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A virus was isolated from Siberian sturgeon Acipenser baeri and bester (beluga Huso huso x sterlet A. ruthenus hybrid) fingerlings in SSO-2, SSF-2 and WSSK-1 cell lines during an acute epizootic on a large fish farm producing fertilised sturgeon eggs and fry. Transmission electron microscopic examination of samples from both inoculated cell cultures and skin of affected fish revealed viral particles with a herpesvirus-like morphology.

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Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) released from the B95-8 marmoset cell line has served as a prototype for biologic and biochemical studies of EBV. Here we identify and characterize a retrovirus carried by many cultures of B95-8 cells. The experiments were stimulated by the isolation of a cDNA clone from B95-8 cells in which sequences from the EBV large internal repeat were linked to gag sequences similar to those of squirrel monkey retrovirus, human isolate, SMRV-H.

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Platelet cytotoxicity was assessed in 70 cancer patients with various tumor localizations and in 30 normal donors. The data presented reveal that the ACL cell line displays the highest sensitivity to platelet cytotoxicity. Using the ACL cells, we discovered that platelets from oncological patients and normal donors display comparable cytotoxicity.

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Intracytoplasmic type A particles known to be precursors to type B retroviruses in murine, hamster and marsupial cells are closely associated with microtubules and microtubule organizing centres. In this publication, the active participation of microtubules in the intracellular transport of the particles to the cell surface has been examined in NIH 3T3 cells infected with M432 virus using vincristine sulphate (VCR) as inhibitor of microtubule polymerization. The release of virus at different times after exposure to VCR was quantified by reverse transcriptase determinations of cell supernatants and by electron microscopic quantification of the number of virions at the cell surface using freeze-dried whole cell replicas.

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The results of studies of a co-carcinogenic effect of two human infectious viruses in tissue culture are reported here. Viable vaccinia virus actively replicating in the cells of primary BALB/c tissue culture and in a number of continuous murine cell lines has been shown to induce in them expression of major structural p30 protein of murine retroviruses. Vaccinia virus has been also shown to cause biochemical transformation of murine cells.

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The DNA synthesis, the cytolytic activity, and the ultrastructure of cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) derived from mixed mouse thymocyte culture on day 5 were studied. CTL of thymic origin were absorbed by centrifugation on the surface of target cell (TC) monolayers. At different time intervals after absorption, single tubular structures (TS) and complex of tubular structures (CTS) linked with ergastoplasmic reticulum, secretory granules, Golgi apparatus, coated vesicles, and multivesicular bodies were detected in the CTL cytoplasm.

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Early in November 1977, several outbreaks of influenza were reported in the far eastern region of the USSR. The epidemic spread rapidly throughout the country affecting mainly people under the age of 20 years. Most of the strains of virus isolated were found to be influenza A subtype H1N1.

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Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (MP-MV) is a RNA virus with an RNA-instructed DNA polymerase first isolated from a rhesus monkey mammary adenocarcinoma in 1970. Until recently, there have been no other isolates. A continuous human amnion cell line, AO, was found to be producing a virus indistinguishable or closely related to the Mason-Pfizer virus as measured by morphological, immunological, and biochemical methods.

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