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Che-Sheng Chung

Researcher at Academia Sinica

Publications -  13
Citations -  1606

Che-Sheng Chung is an academic researcher from Academia Sinica. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vaccinia & Virus. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 13 publications receiving 1466 citations. Previous affiliations of Che-Sheng Chung include National Defense Medical Center.

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A27L Protein Mediates Vaccinia Virus Interaction With Cell Surface Heparan Sulfate

TL;DR: It is reported that vaccinia virus binds to heparan sulfate, a glycosaminoglycan side chain of cell surface proteoglycans, during virus infection, and the notion that cell surface heparin sulfate is important for vaccine infection is supported.
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Vaccinia Virus Envelope H3L Protein Binds to Cell Surface Heparan Sulfate and Is Important for Intracellular Mature Virion Morphogenesis and Virus Infection In Vitro and In Vivo

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that soluble H3L protein binds to heparan sulfate on the cell surface and competes with the binding of vaccinia virus, indicating a role for H 3L protein in IMV adsorption to mammalian cells and is important forvaccinia virus infection in vitro and in vivo.
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Vaccinia Virus Envelope D8L Protein Binds to Cell Surface Chondroitin Sulfate and Mediates the Adsorption of Intracellular Mature Virions to Cells

TL;DR: Viral envelope protein D8L, that binds to chondroitin sulfate on cells, interferes with the adsorption of wild-type vaccinia virions to cells, indicating a role in virus entry.
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Vaccinia Virus Proteome: Identification of Proteins in Vaccinia Virus Intracellular Mature Virion Particles

TL;DR: This study provides the first comprehensive structural analysis of the infectious vaccinia virus IMV, showing that it contains 75 viral proteins, including structural proteins, enzymes, transcription factors, and predicted viral proteins not known to be expressed or present in the IMV.
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Cell Surface Proteoglycans Are Necessary for A27L Protein-Mediated Cell Fusion: Identification of the N-Terminal Region of A27L Protein as the Glycosaminoglycan-Binding Domain

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that A27L-mediated cell fusion is triggered by its interaction with cell surface GAGs through the N-terminal domain, which was thought to be involved in fusion of virus-infected cells induced by acid treatment.