43 research outputs found

    Evaluation of Pneumonia Virus of Mice as a Possible Human Pathogen

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    Pneumonia virus of mice (PVM), a relative of human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), causes respiratory disease in mice. There is serologic evidence suggesting widespread exposure of humans to PVM. To investigate replication in primates, African green monkeys (AGM) and rhesus macaques (n=4) were inoculated with PVM by the respiratory route. Virus was shed intermittently at low levels by a subset of animals, suggesting poor permissiveness. PVM efficiently replicated in cultured human cells and inhibited the type I interferon (IFN) response in these cells. This suggests that poor replication in nonhuman primates was not due to a general nonpermissiveness of primate cells or poor control of the IFN response. Seroprevalence in humans was examined by screening sera from 30 adults and 17 young children for PVM-neutralizing activity. Sera from a single child (6%) and 40% of adults had low neutralizing activity against PVM, which could be consistent with increasing incidence of exposure following early childhood. There was no cross-reaction of human or AGM sera between RSV and PVM and no cross-protection in the mouse model. In native Western blots, human sera reacted with RSV but not PVM proteins under conditions in which AGM immune sera reacted strongly. Serum reactivity was further evaluated by flow cytometry using unfixed Vero cells infected with PVM or RSV expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a measure of viral gene expression. The reactivity of human sera against RSV-infected cells correlated with GFP expression, whereas reactivity against PVM-infected cells was low and uncorrelated with GFP expression. Thus, PVM specificity was not evident. Our results indicate that the PVM-neutralizing activity of human sera is not due to RSV- or PVM-specific antibodies but may be due to low-affinity, polyreactive natural antibodies of the IgG subclass. The absence of PVM-specific antibodies and restriction in nonhuman primates makes PVM unlikely to be a human pathogen

    The GRAVITY+ Project: Towards All-sky, Faint-Science, High-Contrast Near-Infrared Interferometry at the VLTI

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    The GRAVITY instrument has been revolutionary for near-infrared interferometry by pushing sensitivity and precision to previously unknown limits. With the upgrade of GRAVITY and the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) in GRAVITY+, these limits will be pushed even further, with vastly improved sky coverage, as well as faint-science and high-contrast capabilities. This upgrade includes the implementation of wide-field off-axis fringe-tracking, new adaptive optics systems on all Unit Telescopes, and laser guide stars in an upgraded facility. GRAVITY+ will open up the sky to the measurement of black hole masses across cosmic time in hundreds of active galactic nuclei, use the faint stars in the Galactic centre to probe General Relativity, and enable the characterisation of dozens of young exoplanets to study their formation, bearing the promise of another scientific revolution to come at the VLTI.Comment: Published in the ESO Messenge

    Recombinant Respiratory Syncytial Virus with the G and F Genes Shifted to the Promoter-Proximal Positions

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    The genome of human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) encodes 10 mRNAs and 11 proteins in the order 3′-NS1-NS2-N-P-M-SH-G-F-M2-1/M2-2-L-5′. The G and F glycoproteins are the major RSV neutralization and protective antigens. It seems likely that a high level of expression of G and F would be desirable for a live RSV vaccine. For mononegaviruses, the gene order is a major factor controlling the level of mRNA and protein expression due to the polar gradient of sequential transcription. In order to increase the expression of G and F, recombinant RSVs based on strain A2 were constructed in which the G or F gene was shifted from the sixth or seventh position (in a genome lacking the SH gene), respectively, to the first position (rRSV-G1/ΔSH and rRSV-F1/ΔSH, respectively). Another virus was made in which G and F were shifted together to the first and second positions, respectively (rRSV-G1F2/ΔSH). Shifting one or two genes to the promoter-proximal position resulted in increased mRNA and protein expression of the shifted genes, with G and F expression increased up to 2.4-and 7.8-fold, respectively, at the mRNA level and approximately 2.5-fold at the protein level, compared to the parental virus. Interestingly, the transcription of downstream genes was not greatly affected even though shifting G or F, or G and F together, had the consequence of moving the block of genes NS1-NS2-N-P-M-(G) one or two positions further from the promoter. The efficiency of replication of the gene shift viruses in vitro was increased up to 10-fold. However, their efficiency of replication in the lower respiratory tracts of mice was statistically indistinguishable from that of the parental virus. In the upper respiratory tract, replication was slightly reduced on some days for viruses in which G was in the first position. The magnitude of the G-specific antibody response to the gene shift viruses was similar to that to the parental virus, whereas the F-specific response was increased up to fourfold, although this was not reflected in an increase of the neutralizing activity. Thus, shifting the G and F genes to the promoter-proximal position increased virus replication in vitro, had little effect on replication in the mouse, and increased the antigen-specific immunogenicity of the virus beyond that of parental RSV

    Impact behavior of thin thermoplastic composites dependant on manufacturing parameters and layup

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    The amount of structural application of carbon composites has grown massively in the last years. Carbon composites are known to provide superior performance with regard to their specific strength and stiffness. One of the major drawbacks, limiting the fields of application and defining knock down factors, is their sensitivity for impact damages. Thermoplastic resin systems are known to provide a better performance on impact behavior compared to thermoset resin systems. Within this paper, an investigation on the impact behavior of carbon composite plates with PEEK resin system is presented. The impact performance is derived by measurement of damage size, penetration depth and residual strength. For structural applications, composites provide the possibility to take use of tailored mechanical properties of laminates, like strength and stiffness by defining specific stacking sequences. Since the impact performance is also affected by the layup, different laminate configurations, starting from low in plane stiffness up to high stiffness, were investigated. Particularly for lightweight applications thin laminates are relevant. To provide the capability to determine the post impact compressive strength of thin plates, avoiding premature failure caused by buckling, a modified test bed for compression after impact test has been developed. Furthermore, within this work the influence of different manufacturing parameters on the impact performance and material properties was investigated, thus allowing an optimized manufacturing process with regard to cost and performance.Peer reviewed: YesNRC publication: Ye
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