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1. Efficient Production of Papillomavirus Gene Delivery Vectors in Defined In Vitro Reactions

2. Involvement of nucleophosmin (NPM1/B23) in assembly of infectious HPV16 capsids

3. Chondroitin Sulfate Proteoglycans Are De Facto Cellular Receptors for Human Papillomavirus 16 under High Serum Conditions

4. A Prime-Pull-Amplify Vaccination Strategy To Maximize Induction of Circulating and Genital-Resident Intraepithelial CD8+ Memory T Cells

5. Strain-specific properties and T cells regulate the susceptibility to papilloma induction by Mus musculus papillomavirus 1.

6. Efficient Production of Papillomavirus Gene Delivery Vectors in Defined In Vitro Reactions

7. Human Papillomavirus 16 Capsids Mediate Nuclear Entry during Infection

8. A Cell-Free Assembly System for Generating Infectious Human Papillomavirus 16 Capsids Implicates a Size Discrimination Mechanism for Preferential Viral Genome Packaging

9. Involvement of nucleophosmin (NPM1/B23) in assembly of infectious HPV16 capsids

10. The HPV16 and MusPV1 papillomaviruses initially interact with distinct host components on the basement membrane

11. Low doses of flagellin-L2 multimer vaccines protect against challenge with diverse papillomavirus genotypes

12. Characterization of Mus musculus Papillomavirus 1 Infection In Situ Reveals an Unusual Pattern of Late Gene Expression and Capsid Protein Localization

13. The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1

14. Interferon Gamma Prevents Infectious Entry of Human Papillomavirus 16 via an L2-Dependent Mechanism

15. A Human Papillomavirus (HPV)In VitroNeutralization Assay That Recapitulates theIn VitroProcess of Infection Provides a Sensitive Measure of HPV L2 Infection-Inhibiting Antibodies

16. In Vivo Mechanisms of Vaccine-Induced Protection against HPV Infection

17. The role of furin in papillomavirus infection

18. Role of Heparan Sulfate in Attachment to and Infection of the Murine Female Genital Tract by Human Papillomavirus

19. Structure, attachment and entry of polyoma- and papillomaviruses

20. Heparan Sulfate-Independent Cell Binding and Infection with Furin-Precleaved Papillomavirus Capsids

21. Mechanisms of Human Papillomavirus Type 16 Neutralization by L2 Cross-Neutralizing and L1 Type-Specific Antibodies

22. Neutralization of Human Papillomavirus with Monoclonal Antibodies Reveals Different Mechanisms of Inhibition

23. Human α-defensins block papillomavirus infection

24. Cleavage of the papillomavirus minor capsid protein, L2, at a furin consensus site is necessary for infection

25. Establishment of papillomavirus infection is enhanced by promyelocytic leukemia protein (PML) expression

26. Cell Surface-Binding Motifs of L2 That Facilitate Papillomavirus Infection

27. A Direct Interaction between the Survival Motor Neuron Protein and p53 and Its Relationship to Spinal Muscular Atrophy

28. Mouse model of cervicovaginal papillomavirus infection

29. Mouse Model of Cervicovaginal Papillomavirus Infection

30. Large scale RNAi reveals the requirement of nuclear envelope breakdown for nuclear import of human papillomaviruses

31. Positively Charged Termini of the L2 Minor Capsid Protein Are Necessary for Papillomavirus Infection

32. Papillomavirus-Like Particles Induce Acute Activation of Dendritic Cells

33. Intracellular Localization of Proteasomal Degradation of a Viral Antigen

34. Measurement of neutralizing serum antibodies of patients vaccinated with human papillomavirus L1 or L2-based immunogens using furin-cleaved HPV Pseudovirions

35. Direct delivery of exogenous MHC class I molecule-binding oligopeptides to the endoplasmic reticulum of viable cells

36. Identification of a Role for the trans-Golgi Network in Human Papillomavirus 16 Pseudovirus Infection

37. Intravaginal immunization with HPV vectors induces tissue-resident CD8+ T cell responses

38. Papillomavirus infection requires gamma secretase

39. Current understanding of the mechanism of HPV infection

40. The initial steps leading to papillomavirus infection occur on the basement membrane prior to cell surface binding

41. Human papillomavirus type 16 entry: retrograde cell surface transport along actin-rich protrusions

42. A membrane-destabilizing peptide in capsid protein L2 is required for egress of papillomavirus genomes from endosomes

43. Interaction of papillomavirus virus-like particles with human myeloid antigen-presenting cells

44. Strain-Specific Properties and T Cells Regulate the Susceptibility to Papilloma Induction by Mus musculus Papillomavirus 1

45. L1 interaction domains of papillomavirus l2 necessary for viral genome encapsidation

46. The Papillomavirus Minor Capsid Protein, L2, Induces Localization of the Major Capsid Protein, L1, and the Viral Transcription/Replication Protein, E2, to PML Oncogenic Domains

47. Entry of Human Papillomavirus Type 16 by Actin-Dependent, Clathrin- and Lipid Raft-Independent Endocytosis

48. Antigen processing: where tumor-specific T-cell responses begin

49. 109 Ultra human interferons exhibit higher activity than the standard interferons in prevention of human papillomavirus infection in cells

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