Dengue has been a significant public health problem in Colombia since the simultaneous circulation of the four dengue virus serotypes. The replicative fitness of dengue is a biological feature important for virus evolution and contributes to elucidating the behavior of virus populations and viral pathogenesis. However, it has not yet been studied in Colombian isolates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRabies virus P protein participates as a regulating factor in viral transcription and replication; recent studies found an antitranscriptional and antireplicative effect of nerve growth factor (NGF) and Neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) in infected neuron cultures. We investigated here the specific effect of the neurotrophins on P protein, evaluating its synthesis and subcellular distribution in adult mouse dorsal root ganglia neuron cultures infected and treated with NGF or NT-3. The results showed that NGF, but not NT-3, caused an increase in the quantity of P protein and an accumulation of protein in neuronal bodies, revealing changes in transport to the neuritic processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The expression of recombinant viral proteins has been a useful tool to study molecular biology and pathogenesis of virus infections. Because commercial specific antibodies to rabies virus phosphoprotein (P) are currently unavailable, these antibodies must be generated de novo in order to study the role of P protein during the infectious process.
Objective: A polyclonal antibody was produced and characterized for use against the phosphoprotein (P) of rabies virus.