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Wolfgang Mutter

Researcher at University of Rijeka

Publications -  9
Citations -  3096

Wolfgang Mutter is an academic researcher from University of Rijeka. The author has contributed to research in topics: CD8 & T lymphocyte. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 9 publications receiving 3074 citations.

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Site-restricted persistent cytomegalovirus infection after selective long-term depletion of CD4+ T lymphocytes.

TL;DR: The CD8+ effector cells raised in the CD4 subset- deficient host were able of clear vital tissues from productive infection and to restrict asymptomatic, persistent infection to acinar glandular epithelial cells in salivary gland tissue.
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CD8-positive T lymphocytes specific for murine cytomegalovirus immediate-early antigens mediate protective immunity.

TL;DR: MCMV disease provides the first example of a role for nonstructural herpesvirus immediate-early antigens in protective immunity, and is shown to be mediated by virus-specific CD8+ CD4-T lymphocytes.
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Adoptive immunotherapy of murine cytomegalovirus adrenalitis in the immunocompromised host: CD4-helper-independent antiviral function of CD8-positive memory T lymphocytes derived from latently infected donors.

TL;DR: Findings should help settle the debate about which subset of T lymphocytes comprises the effector cells that can directly control cytomegalovirus infection in the murine model system.
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Failure in generating hemopoietic stem cells is the primary cause of death from cytomegalovirus disease in the immunocompromised host.

TL;DR: It is shown that CMV infection interferes with the earliest detectable step in hemopoiesis, the generation of the stem cell CFU-S-I, and thereby prevents the autoreconstitution of bone marrow after sublethal irradiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

CD4-helper-independent antiviral function of CD8-positive memory T lymphocytes derived from latently infected donors

TL;DR: Findings should help settle the debate about which subset of T lymphocytes comprises the effector cells that can directly control cytomegalovirus infection in the murine model system.