about
Quasispecies Structure and Persistence of RNA VirusesExperimental infections with Mycoplasma agalactiae identify key factors involved in host-colonization.Critical role of dispensable genes in Mycoplasma agalactiae interaction with mammalian cells.Biochemical and structural studies with neutralizing antibodies raised against foot-and-mouth disease virus.Genome-scale analysis of Mycoplasma agalactiae loci involved in interaction with host cells.Emergence and selection of RNA virus variants: memory and extinction.Chromosomal transfers in mycoplasmas: when minimal genomes go mobile.Foot-and-mouth disease virus: biology and prospects for disease control.Foot-and-mouth disease virus.Evolution of foot-and-mouth disease virus.Evolution of cell recognition by viruses: a source of biological novelty with medical implications.Emergence of atypical Mycoplasma agalactiae strains harboring a new prophage and associated with an alpine wild ungulate mortality episode.Draft Genome Sequences of Mycoplasma auris and Mycoplasma yeatsii, Two Species of the Ear Canal of CaprinaeDraft Genome Sequences of Mycoplasma alkalescens, Mycoplasma arginini, and Mycoplasma bovigenitalium, Three Species with Equivocal Pathogenic Status for Cattle.Complete Genome Sequence of Mycoplasma putrefaciens Strain 9231, One of the Agents of Contagious Agalactia in Goats.Mycoplasma agalactiae Secretion of β-(1→6)-Glucan, a Rare Polysaccharide in Prokaryotes, Is Governed by High-Frequency Phase Variation.Immunoproteomic identification of MbovP579, a promising diagnostic biomarker for serological detection of Mycoplasma bovis infection.Phase and antigenic variation in mycoplasmas.[Variability and development of viral populations: assessment and implications]Cell recognition by foot-and-mouth disease virus that lacks the RGD integrin-binding motif: flexibility in aphthovirus receptor usage.Memory in viral quasispecies.A single amino acid substitution in nonstructural protein 3A can mediate adaptation of foot-and-mouth disease virus to the guinea pig.Tolerance to mutations in the foot-and-mouth disease virus integrin-binding RGD region is different in cultured cells and in vivo and depends on the capsid sequence context.Recovery of infectious foot-and-mouth disease virus from suckling mice after direct inoculation with in vitro-transcribed RNA.Guinea pig-adapted foot-and-mouth disease virus with altered receptor recognition can productively infect a natural host.Expansion of host-cell tropism of foot-and-mouth disease virus despite replication in a constant environment.Duration and fitness dependence of quasispecies memory.Foot-and-mouth disease virus lacking the VP1 G-H loop: the mutant spectrum uncovers interactions among antigenic sites for fitness gain.Identification of 108K, 93K, and 42K glycoproteins of bovine herpesvirus-1 by monoclonal antibodies.Synthesis and processing of bovine herpesvirus-1 glycoprotein H.Complete alanine scanning of intersubunit interfaces in a foot-and-mouth disease virus capsid reveals critical contributions of many side chains to particle stability and viral function.Replication of bovine respiratory syncytial virus in murine cells depends on type I interferon-receptor functionality.Alvira: comparative genomics of viral strains.Horizontal Gene Transfers in Mycoplasmas (Mollicutes).The Integrative Conjugative Element (ICE) of Mycoplasma agalactiae: Key Elements Involved in Horizontal Dissemination and Influence of Coresident ICEs.A specific PCR to differentiate between gE negative vaccine and wildtype bovine herpesvirus type 1 strainsMycoplasmas under experimental antimicrobial selection: The unpredicted contribution of horizontal chromosomal transferMycoplasma Chromosomal Transfer: A Distributive, Conjugative Process Creating an Infinite Variety of Mosaic Genomes
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description
researcher
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wetenschapper
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հետազոտող
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name
E Baranowski
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E Baranowski
@en
E Baranowski
@es
E Baranowski
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E Baranowski
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type
label
E Baranowski
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E Baranowski
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E Baranowski
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E Baranowski
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E Baranowski
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prefLabel
E Baranowski
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E Baranowski
@en
E Baranowski
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E Baranowski
@nl
E Baranowski
@pl
P106
P31
P496
0000-0003-0660-1854