Publications by authors named "S Kowdle"

Article Synopsis
  • Mumps virus (MuV) is still active globally despite high vaccination rates, and its early cellular targets in the body are unclear.
  • Researchers developed a GFP-tagged MuV strain to investigate which immune cells are most affected, finding that monocytes are particularly susceptible to infection.
  • In studies with mice and human cells, alveolar macrophages were identified as key targets for MuV, indicating their role in the virus's early pathogenesis and spread in the body.
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Unlabelled: The therapeutic potential of gene editing technologies hinges on the development of safe and effective delivery methods. In this study, we developed a temperature-sensitive and less immunogenic Sendai virus (ts SeV) as a novel delivery vector for CRISPR-Cas9 and for efficient gene editing in sensitive human cell types with limited induction of an innate immune response. ts SeV demonstrates high transduction efficiency in human CD34 hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) including transduction of the CD34/CD38/CD45RA/CD90(Thy1)/CD49f stem cell enriched subpopulation.

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Unlabelled: Batborne henipaviruses, such as Nipah and Hendra viruses, represent a major threat to global health due to their propensity for spillover, severe pathogenicity, and high mortality rate in human hosts. Coupled with the absence of approved vaccines or therapeutics, work with the prototypical species and uncharacterized, emergent species is restricted to high biocontainment facilities. There is a scarcity of such specialized spaces for research, and often, the scope and capacity of research, which can be conducted at BSL-4, is limited.

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Coronavirus (CoV) Nsp15 is a viral endoribonuclease (EndoU) with a preference for uridine residues. CoV Nsp15 is an innate immune antagonist which prevents dsRNA sensor recognition and stress granule formation by targeting viral and host RNAs. SARS-CoV-2 restricts and delays the host antiviral innate immune responses through multiple viral proteins, but the role of SARS-CoV-2 Nsp15 in innate immune evasion is not completely understood.

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Viruses have evolved myriad strategies to exploit the translation machinery of host cells to potentiate their replication. However, how paramyxovirus (PMVs) modulate cellular translation for their own benefit has not been systematically examined. Utilizing puromycylation labeling, overexpression of individual viral genes, and infection with wild-type virus versus its gene-deleted counterpart, we found that PMVs significantly inhibit host cells' nascent peptide synthesis during infection, with the viral matrix being the primary contributor to this effect.

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