A well-established example is lactate dehydrogenase virus, which is often found in mouse tumours.
virus | NADH dehydrogenase | West Nile virus | Lactate dehydrogenase | RNA virus | Herpes simplex virus | computer virus | Human T-lymphotropic virus | Computer virus | Virus | Influenza A virus subtype H1N1 | Herpes Simplex Virus | Ebola virus | Virus Buster Serge | Vesicular stomatitis virus | varicella zoster virus | Uganda Virus Research Institute | Tobacco Mosaic Virus | Sin Nombre virus | Ross River virus | Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus | NADPH dehydrogenase | Malate dehydrogenase | Lactate dehydrogenase elevating virus | IMP dehydrogenase | Human respiratory syncytial virus | herpes simplex virus | Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency | Feline immunodeficiency virus | Epstein-Barr virus |
An experiment using mice, published in 1985, showed that jet injectors would frequently transmit the viral infection LDV from one mouse to another.