Infection and establishment of latency in the dog brain after direct inoculation of a nonpathogenic strain of herpes simplex virus-1
A number of diseases affecting the CNS occur in the dog and can be used as models for gene therapy in a large brain. HSV-1 has several potential advantages as a vector to transfer genes into the CNS. However, the ability of HSV-1 to infect CNS cells varies among species and no information was availa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurovirology 2001-04, Vol.7 (2), p.149-154 |
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creator | Sandra L Springer, Charles H Vite, Ara C Polesky, Santosh Kesari, Nigel W Fraser, John H Wolfe |
description | A number of diseases affecting the CNS occur in the dog and can be used as models for gene therapy in a large brain. HSV-1 has several potential advantages as a vector to transfer genes into the CNS. However, the ability of HSV-1 to infect CNS cells varies among species and no information was available for the dog. When the nonpathogenic 1716 strain of HSV-1 was injected into the brains of normal dogs it established a latent infection without signs of pathology. Thus, it appears to be suitable as a vector for therapeutic, or marker genes, in this species. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1080/13550280152058807 |
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HSV-1 has several potential advantages as a vector to transfer genes into the CNS. However, the ability of HSV-1 to infect CNS cells varies among species and no information was available for the dog. When the nonpathogenic 1716 strain of HSV-1 was injected into the brains of normal dogs it established a latent infection without signs of pathology. 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subjects | Animals Brain - pathology Brain - virology Disease Models, Animal Dogs Encephalitis, Herpes Simplex - pathology Encephalitis, Herpes Simplex - virology Genetic Therapy - methods Genetic Vectors Herpes simplex virus 1 Herpesvirus 1, Human - genetics Herpesvirus 1, Human - pathogenicity Male Virulence |
title | Infection and establishment of latency in the dog brain after direct inoculation of a nonpathogenic strain of herpes simplex virus-1 |
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