Publications by authors named "D Derse"

Article Synopsis
  • - Individuals with Down syndrome (DS) are at a higher risk for developing Alzheimer's disease (AD), and the study explores how increased copies of the APP gene play a role in this connection, termed the APP gene dose hypothesis.
  • - The research involved measuring different APP products in various groups, including those with DS, AD-DS, non-demented controls, and sporadic AD cases, revealing significant differences in APP products between these groups.
  • - Findings indicate that AD-DS shows higher levels of certain amyloid beta peptides compared to sporadic AD and highlight the need to further investigate the specific APP products contributing to the unique pathology observed in AD-DS.
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Virus transmission can occur either by a cell-free mode through the extracellular space or by cell-to-cell transmission involving direct cell-to-cell contact. The factors that determine whether a virus spreads by either pathway are poorly understood. Here, we assessed the relative contribution of cell-free and cell-to-cell transmission to the spreading of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

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Tetherin is part of the cellular innate immunity and impedes cell-free transmission of viruses that bud from the plasma membrane by retaining them on the cell surface. Some viruses have evolved activities in different proteins such as Vpu (HIV-1), K-protein (KSHV), Nef (SIV) or Env (HIV-2) to downregulate tetherin and overcome its restriction. We found that chronically HTLV-1 infected T-cell lines express eightfold more tetherin than uninfected transformed T-cell lines suggesting that tetherin expression is not inhibited by the virus.

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Although novel retroviral vectors for use in gene-therapy products are reducing the potential for formation of replication-competent retrovirus (RCR), it remains crucial to screen products for RCR for both research and clinical purposes. For clinical-grade gammaretrovirus-based vectors, RCR screening is achieved by an extended S(+)L(-) or marker-rescue assay, whereas standard methods for replication-competent lentivirus detection are still in development. In this report, we describe a rapid and sensitive method for replication-competent gammaretrovirus detection.

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