|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
|
(2) |
Kathryn Brown, A Bout with Flu. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Bulletin. (2005) 18:3, 32-36.
|
(3) |
|
|
(4) |
|
|
(5) |
Edward C. Holmes, 1918 and All That. Science (2004) 303: 1787-8.
|
(6) |
|
|
(7) |
Robert G. Webster, A Molecular Whodunit. Science (2001) 293: 1773-5.
|
|
(8) |
Tumpey, TM, Basler, CF, Aguilar, PV, Zeng, H, Solorzano, A, Swayne, DE, Cox, NJ, Katz, JM, Taubenberger, JK, Palese, P, Garcia-Sastre, A. Characterization of the Reconstructed 1918 Spanish Pandemic Virus. Science. (2005) 310, 77-80.
|
|
(9) |
Taubenberger, JK, Reid, AH, Lourens, RM, Wang, R, Jin, G, Fanning, TG. Characterization of the 1918 influenza virus polymerase genes. Nature (2005) 437: 889-93.
|
|
|
(10) |
Phillip A. Sharp, 1918 Flu and Responsible Science. Science. (2005) 310: 195.
|
(11) |
Donald Kennedy, Better Never Than Late. Science. (2005) 310: 17.
|
(12) |
Stewart Simonson, Advising on Publication. Science (2006) 311: 336-7.
|
(13) |
Jocelyn Kaiser, 1918 Flu Experiments Spark Concerns About Biosafety. Science (2004) 306: 591.
|
(14) |
Andreas von Bubnoff, The 1918 flu virus is resurrected. Nature (2005) 437: 794-5.
|
(15) |
Jocelyn Kaiser, Resurrected Influenza Virus Yields Secrets of Deadly 1918 Pandemic. Science (2005) 310, 28-29.
|
(16) |
Debora MacKenzie, Experts Fear Escape of 1918 Flu from Lab. The New Scientist, October 21, 2004.
|
(17) |
Flu in Ciculation, Nature (2005) 438: 130.
|
(18) |
Possession, use, and transfer of select agents and toxins reconstructed replication competent forms of the 1918 pandemic influenza virus containing any portion of the coding regions of all eight gene segments. The Federal Register (2005) 70: 61047-9.
|
|
|
|
|