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Phages have shown a high biotechnological potential with numerous applications. The advent of high-resolution microscopy techniques aligned with omic and molecular tools have revealed innovative phage features and enabled new processes that can be further exploited for biotechnological applications in a wide variety of fields. The high-quality original articles and reviews presented in this Special Issue demonstrate the incredible potential of phages and their derived proteins in a wide range of biotechnological applications for human benefit. Considering the emergence of amazing new available bioengineering tools and the high abundance of phages and the multitude of phage proteins yet to be discovered and studied, we believe that the upcoming years will present us with many more fascinating and new previously unimagined phage-based biotechnological applications.
toxicity --- encapsulation --- n/a --- cancerous tumors --- bacteriophage-derived lytic enzyme --- native gel electrophoresis --- bacteriophages --- Cpl-1 --- O-antigen --- ESKAPE --- Clostridium perfringens --- X-ray crystallography --- macromolecular interactions --- safety --- biofilm --- major coat protein --- Streptococcus agalactiae --- Staphylococcus aureus --- tail sheath protein --- magnetic separation --- serotyping --- pathogenic viruses --- liposomes --- tuberculosis --- Listeria monocytogenes --- nanotubular structures --- alpha-sheet --- biosensors --- sarcoidosis --- tailspike proteins --- M13 bacteriophage --- Streptococcus pneumoniae --- gene expression regulation --- bacteriophage recombination --- self-assembly --- phage therapy --- R-type pyocin --- contractile injection systems --- bacteriophage vB_EcoM_FV3 --- microtiter plate assay --- Enterococcus faecalis --- culture enrichment --- drug delivery vehicles --- neurodegenerative disease --- landscape phage --- niosomes --- bacteriophage --- Myoviridae --- bacteriophage evolution --- porous structure --- phage-host interaction --- phage display --- immune response --- antibiotic resistance --- Pseudomonas aeruginosa --- phage --- bacteriocin --- Appelmans --- fluorescence sensor --- molecular probe --- nanomedicine --- Shigella flexneri --- reporter phage --- filters --- in vitro activity --- capsid dynamics --- immunoscreening --- diagnostics --- microarray --- receptor-binding protein --- endolysin --- enzybiotics --- transfersomes --- T7phage library --- Pal
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Ranaviruses and other viruses within the family Iridoviridae, infect a wide range of ecologically and commercially important ectothermic vertebrates, i.e., bony fish, amphibians, and reptiles, and invertebrates, including agricultural and medical pests and cultured shrimp and crayfish, and are responsible for considerable morbidity and mortality. Understanding the impact of these various agents on diverse host species requires the combined efforts of ecologists, veterinarians, pathologists, comparative immunologists and molecular virologists. Unfortunately, investigators involved in these studies often work in discipline-specific silos that preclude interaction with others whose insights and approaches are required to comprehensively address problems related to ranavirus/iridovirus disease. Our intent here is to breakdown these silos and provide a forum where diverse researchers with a common interest in ranavirus/iridovirus biology can profitably interact. As a colleague once quipped, “Three people make a genius.” We are hoping to do something along those lines by presenting a collection of research articles dealing with issues of anti-viral immunity, identification of a potentially novel viral genus exemplified by erythrocytic necrosis virus, viral inhibition of innate immunity, identification of novel hosts for lymphocystivirus and invertebrate iridoviruses, and modelling studies of ranavirus transmission. Collectively these and others will exemplify the breadth of ongoing studies focused on this virus family.
risk assessment --- n/a --- CQIV --- mathematical models --- amphibian --- iridovirus --- ISDL --- Exopalaemon carinicauda --- viral load --- virus isolation --- European chub --- outbreak --- Unconventional T cell --- early detection --- susceptible species --- viral immune evasion --- DNA virus --- Rana grylio virus --- antibody --- intracellular localization --- Rana grylio virus (RGV) --- British Columbia --- Iridoviridae --- Andrias davidianus ranavirus --- viral infection --- susceptible-infected (SI) models --- yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) --- prevalence --- host-pathogen interactions --- Pacific herring --- Procambarus clarkii --- Bayesian inference --- eDNA --- amphibians --- Artemia spp. --- ranavirosis --- cross-species transmission --- FV3 --- SHIV --- Gryllus bimaculatus --- Pacific salmon --- NF-?B --- cricket --- IIV-6 --- virus binding --- erythrocytic necrosis virus (ENV) --- envelope protein --- iridovirus core proteins --- emerging infection --- host --- Ranavirus --- white head --- Rana temporaria --- Imd --- biosecurity --- antiviral immunity --- Decapodiridovirus --- endemic disease --- Macrobrachium rosenbergii --- co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP) --- Common frog --- aquatic animals --- virus surveillance --- immunomodulators --- frog virus 3 --- ELISA --- DIV1 --- megalocytivirus --- Lymphocystis disease virus --- bearded dragon --- susceptibility --- protein interaction --- Pogona vitticeps --- viral erythrocytic necrosis (VEN) --- histopathology --- epidemiology --- native-fish conservation --- viral transmission --- Sparus aurata --- immunohistochemistry --- lizard --- disease dynamics --- immunofluorescence --- transmission modelling --- Macrobrachium nipponense --- interferon --- nonclassical MHC --- heparan sulfate --- ranavirus --- Mexico
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