Amy Doris Brideau

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2000 Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 
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"Amy Brideau"
Mean distance: 17.54 (cluster 32)
 
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Lynn W. Enquist grad student 2000 Princeton
 (Characterization of the Us9 protein and identification of its role in pseudorabies virus transneuronal spread.)
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Lyman MG, Curanovic D, Brideau AD, et al. (2008) Fusion of enhanced green fluorescent protein to the pseudorabies virus axonal sorting protein Us9 blocks anterograde spread of infection in mammalian neurons. Journal of Virology. 82: 10308-11
Brideau AD, Enquist LW, Tirabassi RS. (2000) The role of virion membrane protein endocytosis in the herpesvirus life cycle. Journal of Clinical Virology : the Official Publication of the Pan American Society For Clinical Virology. 17: 69-82
Brideau AD, Eldridge MG, Enquist LW. (2000) Directional transneuronal infection by pseudorabies virus is dependent on an acidic internalization motif in the Us9 cytoplasmic tail. Journal of Virology. 74: 4549-61
Brideau AD, Card JP, Enquist LW. (2000) Role of pseudorabies virus Us9, a type II membrane protein, in infection of tissue culture cells and the rat nervous system. Journal of Virology. 74: 834-45
Enquist LW, Brideau AD. (2000) Searching for genes of Aujeszky's disease virus required for neurotropism and virulence Veterinary Research. 31: 116-116
Brideau AD, del Rio T, Wolffe EJ, et al. (1999) Intracellular trafficking and localization of the pseudorabies virus Us9 type II envelope protein to host and viral membranes. Journal of Virology. 73: 4372-84
Kalejta RF, Brideau AD, Banfield BW, et al. (1999) An integral membrane green fluorescent protein marker, Us9-GFP, is quantitatively retained in cells during propidium iodide-based cell cycle analysis by flow cytometry. Experimental Cell Research. 248: 322-8
Brideau AD, Banfield BW, Enquist LW. (1998) The Us9 gene product of pseudorabies virus, an alphaherpesvirus, is a phosphorylated, tail-anchored type II membrane protein. Journal of Virology. 72: 4560-70
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