Thermal Inactivation Studies with Different Strains of Poliovirus
Open Access
- 1 April 1957
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 78 (4) , 282-290
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.78.4.282
Abstract
Summary: Variations in the rate of destruction of infectivity at 50°C were demonstrated for strains representing the three immunologic types of poliovirus as well as for strains of the same type. These strain differences were consistent upon serial passage of the different virus lines. In addition, variations in thermal resistance of individual infectious units making up a given virus population have been investigated and it has been found that progeny of different virus particles vary in their rates of thermal inactivation. Utilizing selection pressure in the form of propagation of survivors of partially inactivated virus pools, it has been possible to select 50°-resistant variants, the progeny of which retain this characteristic. Other than temperature stability, no differences in properties of the parent and resistant lines could be demonstrated. Plaque morphology, rate of adsorption to monkey kidney cells, rate of destruction of infectivity and antigenicity by 1:4000 formalin, and inactivation at 36.5°C were the same for parent and resistant lines studied. Virus lines readily distinguishable at 50°C were inactivated at identical rates at 36.5°C. Survivor selection at 36.5°C failed to yield variants resistant to this temperature, or to alter the characteristic inactivation rate at 50°C. These results suggest a different mechanism for inactivation at the two temperatures employed.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Virus Adsorption and Plaque Formation in Monolayer Cultures of Trypsin-Dispersed Monkey KidneyThe Journal of Immunology, 1956
- USE OF COLOR CHANGE OF PHENOL RED AS THE INDICATOR IN TITRATING POLIOMYELITIS VIRUS OR ITS ANTIBODY IN A TISSUE–CULTURE SYSTEM12American Journal of Epidemiology, 1954
- Monolayer Tissue Cultures I. Preparation and Standardization of Suspensions of Trypsin-Dispersed Monkey Kidney Cells.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1954
- PLAQUE FORMATION AND ISOLATION OF PURE LINES WITH POLIOMYELITIS VIRUSESThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1954
- STUDIES ON POLIOMYELITIS VIRUSES IN CULTURES OF MONKEY TESTICULAR TISSUE1American Journal of Epidemiology, 1952
- Differences in Cellular Pathogenicity of Two Immunologically Related Poliomyelitis Viruses as Revealed in Tissue Culture.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1951
- Differences in the Degree of Infectiousness of two Related Strains of Poliomyelitis Virus Following their Oral Administration to MonkeysThe Journal of Immunology, 1951
- Nutrition of Animal Cells in Tissue Culture. I. Initial Studies on a Synthetic Medium.,Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1950