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Biomechanics of how the Ebola virus attaches to its host cell Date: March 26, 2019 Source: Lehigh University Summary: Engineers and microbiologists have developed a simple model for virus-host ...
Scientists recently published findings indicating that Ebola virus creates and uses intercellular tunnels to move from cell to cell and evade treatments. Understanding how viruses travel once ...
Despite its isolation three decades ago, Ebola virus continues to cause periodic outbreaks of severe hemorrhagic fever in humans, and the closely related Marburg virus is responsible for a recent ...
How does the Ebola virus prevent immune cells from doing their job - protecting the body from infection - if it doesn’t actually invade them? In a new study from the University of Texas Medical Branch ...
"This is the first time such a platform (liver cells produced from stem cells) has been used to study Ebola virus infection. Our results provide first insights into the host response of primary ...
In a new Cell study, scientists in LJI’s Center for Vaccine Innovation share the first detailed, complete images of a viral structure called the Ebola virus nucleocapsid. This breakthrough may ...
Is the Sudan virus deadlier than Ebola? A key discovery explains how it clings to human cells. The Sudan virus, a close relative of Ebola, has a 50% fatality rate, but its mechanisms of cell ...
Once inside a host cell, the Ebola virus, for example, hijacks molecular pathways to replicate itself and eventually make its way back out of the cell into the bloodstream, where it can spread further ...
"This is the first time such a platform (liver cells produced from stem cells) has been used to study Ebola virus infection. Our results provide first insights into the host response of primary ...
Jess Thomson is a Newsweek Science Reporter based in London UK. Her focus is reporting on science, technology and healthcare. She has covered weird animal behavior, space news and the impacts of ...
A new study reveals the biological secret to the Zika virus's infectious success: Zika uses host cells' own "self-care" ...