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Featured researches published by Peter Vogel.


Journal of NeuroVirology | 1996

Neuroinvasion by simian immunodeficiency virus coincides with increased numbers of perivascular macrophages/microglia and intrathecal immune activation

Joan H. Lane; Vito G. Sasseville; Mary O. Smith; Peter Vogel; Douglas R. Pauley; Melvyn P. Heyes; Andrew A. Lackner

During peak viremia and initial antibody response, rhesus macaques infected with pathogenic and nonpathogenic isolates of SIV show distinct differences in viral load and tissue distribution. Animals infected with pathogenic isolates of SIV invariably have virus in the CSF and brain parenchyma by two weeks postinoculation, whereas animals infected with nonpathogenic isolates do not. Mechanisms underlying neuroinvasion by SIV and HIV are unknown, but recruitment of latently infected mononuclear cells from the peripheral circulation (Trojan horse theory) is frequently proposed. Circulating monocytes, from which perivascular macrophage/microglia are derived, are a likely vehicle for cell-associated transport of virus across the blood-brain barrier. This transport and the kinetics of perivascular macrophage/microglial turnover in the CNS likely depend on endothelial and leukocyte adhesion molecules such as vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1), which has previously been shown to be upregulated on cerebrovascular endothelium in SIV encephalitis. To investigate the role of peripheral monocyte recruitment into the perivascular macrophage/microglial cell pool at the time of initial viral neuroinvasion, we examined the temporal relationships among perivascular macrophage/microglia density, endothelial VCAM-1 expression and localization of viral nucleic acid in the CNS of macaques acutely infected with pathogenic and nonpathogenic molecular clones of SIV. The concentration of CSF quinolinic acid, a marker of intrathecal immune and macrophage activation, was examined concurrently. We found that significant increases in the density of perivascular macrophages/microglia coincided with viral neuroinvasion and marked elevations in CSF quinolinic acid. Furthermore, combined in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry demonstrated that infected perivascular cells were macrophages/microglia. These findings provide evidence suggesting that neuroinvasion occurs through an influx of infected monocytes which take up residence in the CNS as perivascular macrophages/microglia. VCAM-1 expression, however, was not clearly correlated with these events, thus its contribution to initial viral neuroinvasion is unclear.


Journal of Medical Primatology | 1992

Mechanism of genital transmission of SIV: a hypothesis based on transmission studies and the location of SIV in the genital tract of chronically infected female rhesus macaques.

Christopher J. Miller; Alexander Nj; Peter Vogel; James H. Anderson; Preston A. Marx


American Journal of Pathology | 2006

ADP-Ribosylation Factor-Like 3 Is Involved in Kidney and Photoreceptor Development

Jeffrey J. Schrick; Peter Vogel; Alejandro Abuin; Billy Hampton; Dennis S. Rice


American Journal of Pathology | 1992

Localization of SIV in the genital tract of chronically infected female rhesus macaques

Christopher J. Miller; Peter Vogel; Nancy J. Alexander; Suganto Sutjipto; Andrew G. Hendrickx; Preston A. Marx


American Journal of Pathology | 1993

Simian immunodeficiency virus infection of the gastrointestinal tract of rhesus macaques. Functional, pathological, and morphological changes.

Carla Heise; Peter Vogel; Christopher J. Miller; Charles H. Halsted; Satya Dandekar


Laboratory Investigation | 1994

Pathology and localization of simian immunodeficiency virus in the reproductive tract of chronically infected male rhesus macaques

Christopher J. Miller; Peter Vogel; Alexander Nj; Dandekar S; Hendrickx Ag; P A Marx


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2007

Mice lacking α/β subunits of GlcNAc-1-phosphotransferase exhibit growth retardation, retinal degeneration, and secretory cell lesions

Claire M. Gelfman; Peter Vogel; Tawfik Issa; C. Alexander Turner; Wang-Sik Lee; Stuart Kornfeld; Dennis S. Rice


Journal of Medical Primatology | 1993

Distribution of SIV infection in the gastrointestinal tract of rhesus macaques at early and terminal stages of AIDS

Carla Heise; Peter Vogel; Christopher J. Miller; Andrew A. Lackner; Satya Dandekar


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1993

Evidence of horizontal transmission of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in Simian immunodeficiency virus-infected rhesus macaques

Peter Vogel; Christopher J. Miller; Linda L. Lowenstine; Andrew A. Lackner


Archive | 2007

Gene disruptons, compositions and methods relating thereto

Kristi Rae Bollinger; Allison Anne Byers Horner; Katherin E. Combs; Ling Ling Culbertson; Jaime-Jo Cunningham; Frederic Desauvage; Joel Edwards; Rosemary Girgis; Leslie Jane Green; Dina Rebecca Mclain; Laurie Jeanette Minze; Charles A. Montgomery; Bobby Joe Payne; Heidi S. Phillips; Zheng-Zheng Shi; Mary Jean Sparks; Joy Stala; Tracy Tang; Teresa Gail Townsend; Peter Vogel; Tracy Ellen Willis Sevaux

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Joy Stala

Lexicon Pharmaceuticals

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Joel Edwards

Lexicon Pharmaceuticals

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