14 results match your criteria: "Institute of Experimental Pathology and Therapy[Affiliation]"

For the first time in the ethnic group of Abkhazians, the association analysis of polymorphic DNA-markers of the antioxidant genes CAT (rs1001179), MSRA (rs10098474), GPX1 (rs1050450), GSR (rs1002149), GSTP1 (rs1695), SOD1 (rs2070424), SOD2 (rs4880), PON1 (rs662), PON2 (rs7493) with age was performed. Using ROC-analysis and logistic regression, it was found that the spectrum of alleles and genotypes frequencies of PON1 and GSTP1 genes polymorphic markers change throughout the studied age period (21-107 years old); the distribution of allele and genotype frequencies of CAT and SOD2 genes polymorphic markers changes within the age of 60 years. Multilocus genetic markers of longevity were determined by the Monte Carlo Markov chain method.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The data characterizing spontaneous infections of Old World monkeys: measles, poliomyelitis, hepatitis A (HPA), encephalomyocarditis, coronavirus infection, simian hemorrhagic fever (SHF), are presented. The experimental infections were reproduced with the isolated pathogens. On these models, pathogenesis and epidemiology of these diseases were studied.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reorganization and expansion of the nidoviral family Arteriviridae.

Arch Virol

March 2016

Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.

The family Arteriviridae presently includes a single genus Arterivirus. This genus includes four species as the taxonomic homes for equine arteritis virus (EAV), lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus (LDV), porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome virus (PRRSV), and simian hemorrhagic fever virus (SHFV), respectively. A revision of this classification is urgently needed to accommodate the recent description of eleven highly divergent simian arteriviruses in diverse African nonhuman primates, one novel arterivirus in an African forest giant pouched rat, and a novel arterivirus in common brushtails in New Zealand.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Historical Outbreaks of Simian Hemorrhagic Fever in Captive Macaques Were Caused by Distinct Arteriviruses.

J Virol

August 2015

Integrated Research Facility at Fort Detrick, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Fort Detrick, Frederick, Maryland, USA

Simian hemorrhagic fever (SHF) is lethal for macaques. Based on clinical presentation and serological diagnosis, all reported SHF outbreaks were thought to be caused by different strains of the same virus, simian hemorrhagic fever virus (SHFV; Arteriviridae). Here we show that the SHF outbreaks in Sukhumi in 1964 and in Alamogordo in 1989 were caused not by SHFV but by two novel divergent arteriviruses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two combined injections of levonorgestrel butanoate (4 mg/kg) and testosterone buciclate (8 mg/kg) at 3-month intervals to adult male baboons initiated a decrease in sperm concentration from baseline values of 490x10(6)/ml to minimum values of 17x10(6/ml. This suppression was sustained until week 32, during which time between one and three azoospermic samples were collected from each of four out of five treated baboons in the period 10-24 weeks. Circulating plasma levels of LH and testosterone decreased to approximately 20-75% of baseline values.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study in adult male baboons was conducted to establish the dose of a long-acting progestogen, levonorgestrel butanoate, and that of a long-acting androgen, testosterone buciclate, which, when combined, would achieve optimal and prolonged suppression of spermatogenesis. Two intramuscular injections of levonorgestrel butanoate at 3-month intervals and in the dose range 1-8 mg/kg reduced sperm production and plasma concentrations of testosterone, LH and FSH for periods of up to 6 months. The suppression of sperm production was greatest and most prolonged in the 4 mg/kg group.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fifteen cases of generalized peripheral T-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in baboons were phenotyped immunologically and morphologically. Using the updated Kiel classification the cases included low-grade and high-grade lymphomas and low-grade lymphomas that had transformed into high-grade lymphomas. In the low-grade group there were seven cases of lymphocytic type, partly corresponding to chronic lymphocytic leukaemia of T type and to T-zone lymphoma in man.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Papio hamadryas baboons in the Sukhumi colony develop enzootic outbreaks of malignant lymphomas with an incidence of about 1.5% per year among adults of the high-risk stock. We investigated the surface phenotypes of cells from normal and lymphomatous animals using antibodies against human lymphocyte antigens.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Virologic, serologic, biochemical, and morphological data characterizing spontaneous hepatitis A (HA) in cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) and green monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) are reported. Experimental HA was induced in macaques as a result of infection with human hepatitis A virus (HAV-h). Disease similar to human HA was induced in cynomolgus macaques by HAV isolates from spontaneously sick rhesus (M.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper describes the spread of lymphoma through a baboon (Papio hamadryas) colony in the Institute of Experimental Pathology and Therapy at Sukhumi, USSR. In the late 1960s, Soviet scientists inoculated 12 baboons with cells from hospitalized human leukemia patients, causing the death of a total of 135 animals between 1967 and 1978. The death rate from lymphoma averages almost 12 baboons per year in the Sukhumi colony.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Use of nonhuman primates in cancer research.

J Med Primatol

August 1994

Institute of Experimental Pathology and Therapy, USSR Academy of Medical Sciences, Sukhumi.

A short historical review of the use of primates in cancer research is presented followed by a review of various forms of neoplasma observed in the oldest existing Primate Center. Special attention is paid to baboon lymphomas studied for the past two decades at the U.S.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF