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1. Cell culture co- and superinfection experiments suggest that transmission during captivity contributes to the presence of reptarenavirus S and L segment swarms in boid inclusion body disease-positive snakes.

2. Cellular N-Myristoyl Transferases Are Required for Mammarenavirus Multiplication.

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3. Host receptor-targeted therapeutic approach to counter pathogenic New World mammarenavirus infections.

4. Novel Dihydroorotate Dehydrogenase Inhibitors with Potent Interferon-Independent Antiviral Activity against Mammarenaviruses In Vitro.

5. Brothers in Arms: Structure, Assembly and Function of Arenaviridae Nucleoprotein.

6. PROTEIN ELECTROPHORESIS OF PLASMA SAMPLES FROM BOA CONSTRICTORS WITH AND WITHOUT REPTARENAVIRUS INFECTION.

7. Differences in Tissue and Species Tropism of Reptarenavirus Species Studied by Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Pseudotypes.

8. E3 Ligase ITCH Interacts with the Z Matrix Protein of Lassa and Mopeia Viruses and Is Required for the Release of Infectious Particles.

9. Antibody response in snakes with boid inclusion body disease.

10. The ReFRAME library as a comprehensive drug repurposing library to identify mammarenavirus inhibitors.

11. [Lassa virus and myeloid dendritic cells: a privileged tropism for the suppression of the T lymphocyte response].

12. Effects of mammarenavirus infection (Wēnzhōu virus) on the morphology of Rattus exulans.

13. Interactome analysis of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus nucleoprotein in infected cells reveals ATPase Na+/K+ transporting subunit Alpha 1 and prohibitin as host-cell factors involved in the life cycle of mammarenaviruses.

14. Structural Basis for Receptor Selectivity by the Whitewater Arroyo Mammarenavirus.

15. Transcription and replication mechanisms of Bunyaviridae and Arenaviridae L proteins.

16. Inhibitors of cellular kinases with broad-spectrum antiviral activity for hemorrhagic fever viruses.

17. Replication of boid inclusion body disease-associated arenaviruses is temperature sensitive in both boid and mammalian cells.

18. Animal models of viral hemorrhagic fever.

19. Matrix proteins as centralized organizers of negative-sense RNA virions.

20. Current drug discovery strategies against arenavirus infections.

21. Tacaribe virus causes fatal infection of an ostensible reservoir host, the Jamaican fruit bat.

22. The curious case of arenavirus entry, and its inhibition.

23. Minigenomes, transcription and replication competent virus-like particles and beyond: reverse genetics systems for filoviruses and other negative stranded hemorrhagic fever viruses.

24. [Dengue and other hemorrhagic viral fevers].

25. Posttranslational modification of alpha-dystroglycan, the cellular receptor for arenaviruses, by the glycosyltransferase LARGE is critical for virus binding.

26. Lassa and Mopeia virus replication in human monocytes/macrophages and in endothelial cells: different effects on IL-8 and TNF-alpha gene expression.

27. Pathogenesis of Pichinde virus infection in strain 13 guinea pigs: an immunocytochemical, virologic, and clinical chemistry study.

28. [pH-dependent fusion of eukaryotic cells, caused by arenaviruses, pathogenic and non-pathogenic for humans].

29. Photochemical inactivation of viruses with psoralens: an overview.

30. Isolation of an arenavirus from a marmoset with callitrichid hepatitis and its serologic association with disease.

31. [Lysosomotropic agents inhibit the penetration of arenaviruses into a culture of BHK-21 and Vero cells].

32. Junin virus replication in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of patients with Argentine haemorrhagic fever.

33. Ambisense RNA genomes of arenaviruses and phleboviruses.

34. In vivo replication of pathogenic and attenuated strains of Junin virus in different cell populations of lymphatic tissue.

35. Structural components and replication of arenaviruses.

36. [Features of infection in hamsters by Junín virus].

37. Macrophages are involved in age-dependent resistance of rats to Junin virus infection.

38. Early events in arenavirus replication are sensitive to lysosomotropic compounds.

39. Review article the biology of the arenaviruses.

40. MRC-5 cells, a model for Junín virus persistent infection.

41. [Optimal conditions for preserving the infectivity of Tacaribe virus under various temperatures].

42. Biochemistry of arenaviruses.

43. Junin virus-induced chromosomal aberrations in the guinea pig. Synergism between the attenuated strain XJ-clone 3 and caffeine.

44. [Inhibition of the multiplication of Tacaribe, Pichindé and Junín arenaviruses in the presence of glucosamine or 2-deoxy-D-glucose].

46. Replication of hemorrhagic fever viruses in monocytic cells.

47. [Resistance of pathogenic viruses--survey of literature].

48. Relationship between Junin virus infection of thymus and the establishment of persistence in rodents.

49. [Lack of viral persistence in 2 Cebus sp].

50. [Association of the infection of the thymus and bone marrow with the establishment of persistent infection with Junin virus in 2 genera of rodents].