English |
adeno-associated virus |
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Attestation |
3
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Part of speech |
Noun syntagm
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Grammatical label |
Countable
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Variant |
AAV
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Definition |
Parvoviridae; icosahedral, 20-25 nm in diameter; single stranded DNA genome with protein capsid. AAV is dependent for replication on presence of wild type adenovirus or herpesvirus; in the absence of helper virus, AAV will stably integrate into the host cell genome. Co-infection with helper virus triggers lytic cycle as do some agents which appropriately perturb host cells. Transduction does not appear to require cell division. Biosafety Level: NIH BSL 2- Pathogenicity: No known pathology for wild type AAV serotype 2. Wild type AAV integrates preferentially into human chromosome 19q13.3-qter; recombinant vectors lose this specificity and appear to integrate randomly, thereby posing a theroretical risk of insertional mutagenesis.
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Definition source |
University of California – San Diego. The Program in Human Gene Therapy. Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) – Infectious substances. Section 1: Infectious Agent
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Context |
Adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated expression of a human gamma-globin gene in human progenitor-derived erythroid cells
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Context source |
Rund, D. & Rachmilewitz, E. (2000). ‘New Trends in the treatment of beta-thalassemia’. Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology 33(2):105-18. (RISCEN189)
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Figure source |
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ICTVdb/ICTVdB/50130001.htm
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Subject field |
Haemopoiesis
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Sub-field (level 1) |
Thalassemias
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Sub-field (level 2) |
Therapies
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Generic concept |
Viral vector
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Related concept |
Gene therapy
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it |
Adenovirus associato
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Reliability code |
3
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