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We are analyzing https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00705-005-0598-6.

Title:
Replication of feline coronaviruses in peripheral blood monocytes | Archives of Virology
Description:
Feline infectious peritonitis virus (FIPV) (Coronaviridae) causes the most lethal viral infection in cats: FIP. The related feline enteric coronavirus (FECV) causes mild enteritis. Why these feline coronaviruses manifest so differently in vivo is not known. In this study, infection kinetics (titres and antigen expression) of FIPV 79-1146, and FECV 79-1683, were determined in peripheral blood monocytes from 3 donor cats and compared to those in Crandell feline kidney (CrFK) cells. The infection kinetics in monocytes were host dependent. Monocytes from 1 cat were resistant to both FIPV- and FECV-infection. Monocytes from the other 2 cats could initially be infected by both FIPV and FECV but FIPV infection was sustained in monocytes of only one cat. FECV-infection was never sustained and viral production was up to 100 times lower than in FIPV-infected monocytes. In CrFK cells, FIPV and FECV infection kinetics did not differ. In monocytes of a larger cat population (n = 19) the 3 infection patterns were also found. Considering all 22 investigated cats, 3/22 were not susceptible for FIPV and FECV. The rest could be infected with FECV and FIPV but 10/22 cats had monocytes that only sustained FIPV infection and 9/22 sustained neither FIPV nor FECV infection.
Website Age:
28 years and 1 months (reg. 1997-05-29).

Matching Content Categories {πŸ“š}

  • Science
  • Education
  • Pets

Content Management System {πŸ“}

What CMS is link.springer.com built with?

Custom-built

No common CMS systems were detected on Link.springer.com, and no known web development framework was identified.

Traffic Estimate {πŸ“ˆ}

What is the average monthly size of link.springer.com audience?

🌠 Phenomenal Traffic: 5M - 10M visitors per month


Based on our best estimate, this website will receive around 8,280,528 visitors per month in the current month.

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How Does Link.springer.com Make Money? {πŸ’Έ}

We don’t know how the website earns money.

Many websites are intended to earn money, but some serve to share ideas or build connections. Websites exist for all kinds of purposes. This might be one of them. Link.springer.com has a secret sauce for making money, but we can't detect it yet.

Keywords {πŸ”}

feline, google, scholar, cas, pubmed, article, cats, infectious, peritonitis, coronavirus, monocytes, infection, fipv, virol, vet, coronaviruses, blood, nauwynck, virus, virology, viral, peripheral, enteric, fecv, cells, access, van, horzinek, pedersen, pract, privacy, cookies, content, expression, infected, rottier, res, vennema, information, publish, search, related, sustained, macrophages, groot, pensaert, susceptibility, egberink, university, scott,

Topics {βœ’οΈ}

rj de groot stoddart fw scott month download article/chapter volders pj rottier ap-2 adaptor complex foley nc pedersen buddaert mb pensaert viral antigen expression gunn-moore feline coronavirus-infected cells full article pdf reverse transcriptase pcr avoid complement-mediated lysis peripheral blood monocytes closed cat-breeding colony feline infectious peritonitis feline enteric coronavirus article archives antigen expression feline coronavirus infection lethal viral infection naturally fcov-infected cats privacy choices/manage cookies enteric coronavirus infection feline coronavirus rna high viral loads viral production feline enteric coronaviruses authors contributed equally coronavirus infection correlates article log crandell feline kidney respiratory syndrome virus attenuated coronavirus vaccines article cite related subjects feline coronaviruses manifest article dewerchin check access instant access vennema jw rossen naturally infected cats european economic area scope submit manuscript britt ja nelson bios scientific publishers phorbol myristate acetate enjuanes hy naim virus production cats experimentally inoculated

Questions {❓}

  • HF Egberink AP Herrewegh NM Schuurman JS van der Linde-Sipman MC Horzinek RJ de Groot (1995) FIP, easy to diagnose?

Schema {πŸ—ΊοΈ}

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         headline:Replication of feline coronaviruses in peripheral blood monocytes
         description:Feline infectious peritonitis virus (FIPV) (Coronaviridae) causes the most lethal viral infection in cats: FIP. The related feline enteric coronavirus (FECV) causes mild enteritis. Why these feline coronaviruses manifest so differently in vivo is not known. In this study, infection kinetics (titres and antigen expression) of FIPV 79-1146, and FECV 79-1683, were determined in peripheral blood monocytes from 3 donor cats and compared to those in Crandell feline kidney (CrFK) cells. The infection kinetics in monocytes were host dependent. Monocytes from 1 cat were resistant to both FIPV- and FECV-infection. Monocytes from the other 2 cats could initially be infected by both FIPV and FECV but FIPV infection was sustained in monocytes of only one cat. FECV-infection was never sustained and viral production was up to 100 times lower than in FIPV-infected monocytes. In CrFK cells, FIPV and FECV infection kinetics did not differ. In monocytes of a larger cat population (n = 19) the 3 infection patterns were also found. Considering all 22 investigated cats, 3/22 were not susceptible for FIPV and FECV. The rest could be infected with FECV and FIPV but 10/22 cats had monocytes that only sustained FIPV infection and 9/22 sustained neither FIPV nor FECV infection.
         datePublished:2005-08-01T00:00:00Z
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      headline:Replication of feline coronaviruses in peripheral blood monocytes
      description:Feline infectious peritonitis virus (FIPV) (Coronaviridae) causes the most lethal viral infection in cats: FIP. The related feline enteric coronavirus (FECV) causes mild enteritis. Why these feline coronaviruses manifest so differently in vivo is not known. In this study, infection kinetics (titres and antigen expression) of FIPV 79-1146, and FECV 79-1683, were determined in peripheral blood monocytes from 3 donor cats and compared to those in Crandell feline kidney (CrFK) cells. The infection kinetics in monocytes were host dependent. Monocytes from 1 cat were resistant to both FIPV- and FECV-infection. Monocytes from the other 2 cats could initially be infected by both FIPV and FECV but FIPV infection was sustained in monocytes of only one cat. FECV-infection was never sustained and viral production was up to 100 times lower than in FIPV-infected monocytes. In CrFK cells, FIPV and FECV infection kinetics did not differ. In monocytes of a larger cat population (n = 19) the 3 infection patterns were also found. Considering all 22 investigated cats, 3/22 were not susceptible for FIPV and FECV. The rest could be infected with FECV and FIPV but 10/22 cats had monocytes that only sustained FIPV infection and 9/22 sustained neither FIPV nor FECV infection.
      datePublished:2005-08-01T00:00:00Z
      dateModified:2005-08-01T00:00:00Z
      pageStart:2483
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         Viral Infection
         Peritonitis
         Antigen Expression
         Viral Production
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External Links {πŸ”—}(106)

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