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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Junction Adhesion Molecule Is a Receptor for Reovirus

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TLDR
Reovirus interaction with cell-surface receptors is a critical determinant of both cell-type specific tropism and virus-induced intracellular signaling events that culminate in cell death.
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This article is published in Cell.The article was published on 2001-02-09 and is currently open access. It has received 627 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Tropism & Junctional Adhesion Molecule A.

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Book ChapterDOI

Mechanisms of Apoptosis During Reovirus Infection

TL;DR: This review examines the mechanisms of reovirus-induced apoptosis and investigates the possibility that inhibition of apoptosis may provide a novel strategy for limiting virus-induced tissue damage following infection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Junctional adhesion molecule-A is overexpressed in advanced multiple myeloma and determines response to oncolytic reovirus

TL;DR: It is reported that the reovirus receptor, junctional adhesion molecule-A (JAM-A) is highly expressed in primary cells from patients with MM and the majority of MM cell lines compared to normal controls, suggesting that Reolysin may be an effective agent for patients with relapsed/refractory disease due to their high JAM-B levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prediction of GCRV virus-host protein interactome based on structural motif-domain interactions

TL;DR: Although the predicted PPIs may contain some false positives due to limited data resource and poor research background in non-model species, the computational method still provide reasonable amount of interactions, which can be further validated by high throughput experiments.
Journal Article

Tissue-specific expression of occludin, zona occludens-1, and junction adhesion molecule A in the duodenum, ileum, colon, kidney, liver, lung, brain, and skeletal muscle of C57BL mice.

TL;DR: The results suggest that occludin, JAM-A, and ZO-1 genes are normally expressed in the intestine, kidney, liver, lung, lungs, and brain indicating that these factors may be essential for maintaining appropriate physiological concentration of ions, solutes and water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transient infection of freshly isolated human colorectal tumor cells by reovirus T3D intermediate subviral particles.

TL;DR: It is concluded that infection of human colorectal tumor cells by reovirus T3D requires processing of virions to ISVPs, but that oncolysis is prevented by a tumor cell response that aborts viral protein synthesis and the generation of infectious viral particles, irrespective of KRAS mutation status.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Activators and target genes of Rel/NF-kappaB transcription factors.

TL;DR: It is argued that NF-κB functions more generally as a central regulator of stress responses and pairing stress responsiveness and anti-apoptotic pathways through the use of a common transcription factor may result in increased cell survival following stress insults.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation of a Common Receptor for Coxsackie B Viruses and Adenoviruses 2 and 5

TL;DR: Identification of CAR as a receptor for these two unrelated and structurally distinct viral pathogens is important for understanding viral pathogenesis and has implications for therapeutic gene delivery with adenovirus vectors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Immunological Synapse: A Molecular Machine Controlling T Cell Activation

TL;DR: Immunological synapse formation is now shown to be an active and dynamic mechanism that allows T cells to distinguish potential antigenic ligands and was a determinative event for T cell proliferation.
Journal ArticleDOI

NF-κB is a target of AKT in anti-apoptotic PDGF signalling

TL;DR: A role for NF-κB in growth factor signalling is established and an anti-apoptotic Ras/PI(3)K/Akt/IKK/NF-κBs pathway is defined, thus linking anti-APoptotic signalling with transcription machinery.
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