National Academies Press: OpenBook
Suggested Citation:"Contents." National Academy of Sciences. 1996. (NAS Colloquium) Genetic Engineering of Viruses and Viral Vectors. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/5708.
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PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Table of Contents

Papers from a National Academy of Sciences Colloquium: Genetic Engineering of Viruses and Viral Vectors

 

 

Genetic engineering of viruses and of virus vectors: A preface
Peter Palese and Bernard Roizman

 

11287

 

 

Site-specific integration by adeno-associated virus
R.Michael Linden, Peter Ward, Catherine Giraud, Ernest Winocour, and Kenneth I.Berns

 

11288–11294

 

 

Oncogenic potential of the adenovirus E4orf6 protein
Mary Moore, Nobuo Horikoshi, and Thomas Shenk

 

11295–11301

 

 

Adenovirus-mediated interleukin-12 gene therapy for metastatic colon carcinoma
Manuel Caruso, Khiem Pham-Nguyen, Yok-Lam Kwong, Bisong Xu, Ken-Ichiro Kosai, Milton Finegold, Savio L.C.Woo, and Shu-Hsia Chen

 

11302–11306

 

 

The function of herpes simplex virus genes: A primer for genetic engineering of novel vectors
Bernard Roizman

 

11307–11312

 

 

The application of genetically engineered herpes simplex viruses to the treatment of experimental brain tumors
Samita S.Andreansky, Bin He, G.Yancey Gillespie, Liliana Soroceanu, James Markert, Joany Chou, Bernard Roizman, and Richard J.Whitley

 

11313–11318

 

 

Replication-defective herpes simplex virus vectors for gene transfer in vivo
Peggy Marconi, David Krisky, Thomas Oligino, Pietro L.Poliani, Ramesh Ramakrishnan, William F.Goins, David J.Fink, and Joseph C.Glorioso

 

11319–11320

 

 

A deletion mutant in the human cytomegalovirus gene encoding IE1491aa is replication defective due to a failure in autoregulation
Edward S.Mocarski, George W.Kemble, John M. Lyle, and Richard F.Greaves

 

11321–11326

 

 

Human cytomegalovirus US3 impairs transport and maturation of major histocompatibility complex class I heavy chains
Thomas R.Jones, Emmanuel J.H.J.Wiertz, Lei Sun, Kenneth N.Fish, Jay A.Nelson, and Hidde L.Ploegh

 

11327–11333

 

 

Epstein-Barr virus vectors for gene delivery to B lymphocytes
Erle S.Robertson, Tadamasa Ooka, and Elliott D.Kieff

 

11334–11340

 

 

Genetically engineered poxviruses for recombinant gene expression, vaccination, and safety
Bernard Moss

 

11341–11348

 

 

Applications of pox virus vectors to vaccination: An update
Enzo Paoletti

 

11349–11353

Suggested Citation:"Contents." National Academy of Sciences. 1996. (NAS Colloquium) Genetic Engineering of Viruses and Viral Vectors. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/5708.
×

 

 

Negative-strand RNA viruses: Genetic engineering and applications
Peter Palese, Hongyong Zheng, Othmar G. Engelhardt, Stephan Pleschka, and Adolfo García-Sastre

 

11354–11358

 

 

Foreign glycoproteins expressed from recombinant vesicular stomatitis viruses are incorporated efficiently into virus particles
Matthias J.Schnell, Linda Buonocore, Evelyne Kretzschmar, Erik Johnson, and John K.Rose

 

11359–11365

 

 

Specific infection of CD4+ target cells by recombinant rabies virus pseudotypes carrying the HIV-1 envelope spike protein
Teshome Mebatsion and Karl-Klaus Conzelmann

 

11366–11370

 

 

Alphavirus-based expression vectors: Strategies and applications
Ilya Frolov, Thomas A.Hoffman, Béla M.Prágai, Sergey A.Dryga, Henry V.Huang, Sondra Schlesinger, and Charles M.Rice

 

11371–11377

 

 

Early events in poliovirus infection: Virus-receptor interactions
Vincent R.Racaniello

 

11378–11381

 

 

Efficient transfer, integration, and sustained long-term expression of the transgene in adult rat brains injected with a lentiviral vector
Luigi Naldini, Ulrike Blömer, Fred H.Gage, Didier Trono, and Inder M.Verma

 

11382–11388

 

 

Use of virion DNA as a cloning vector for the construction of mutant and recombinant herpesviruses
S.Monroe Duboise, Jie Guo, Ronald C.Desrosiers, and Jae U.Jung

 

11389–11394

 

 

Development of HIV vectors for anti-HIV gene therapy
Eric Poeschla, Pierre Corbeau, and Flossie Wong-Staal

 

11395–11399

 

 

A stable human-derived packaging cell line for production of high titer retrovirus/vesicular stomatitis virus G pseudotypes
Daniel S.Ory, Beverly A.Neugeboren, and Richard C.Mulligan

 

11400–11406

 

 

Cell-surface receptors for retroviruses and implications for gene transfer
A.Dusty Miller

 

11407–11413

 

 

Immunization with DNA vaccines encoding glycoprotein D or glycoprotein B, alone or in combination, induces protective immunity in animal models of herpes simplex virus-2 disease
William L.McClements, Marcy E.Armstrong, Robert D.Keys, and Margaret A.Liu

 

11414–11420

 

 

Fusigenic viral liposome for gene therapy in cardiovascular diseases
Victor J.Dzau, Michael J.Mann, Ryuichi Morishita, and Yasufumi Kaneda

 

11421–11425

Suggested Citation:"Contents." National Academy of Sciences. 1996. (NAS Colloquium) Genetic Engineering of Viruses and Viral Vectors. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/5708.
×
Page R1
Suggested Citation:"Contents." National Academy of Sciences. 1996. (NAS Colloquium) Genetic Engineering of Viruses and Viral Vectors. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/5708.
×
Page R2
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