AVIAN INFLUENZA A VIRUSES
- 1 January 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 32 (6) , 855-+
Abstract
The antigenic structure of eight strains of influenza A viruses of avian origin was investigated by haemagglutination inhibition, virus neutralization and strain-specific complement fixation. All strains could be distinguished from each other, but certain cross-reactions were observed allowing the establishment of four antigenic groupings, as follows: (1) classic fowl plague virus ("Dutch" strain), Turkey/England/63 ("Lang-ham" strain) and virus N; (2) two strains isolated from ducks, one in Czechoslovakia in 1956 and one in England in 1962; (3) a third strain isolated from ducks in England in 1956; (4) the "Smith" strain (Chicken/ Scotland/50) and the tern virus (Tern/South Africa/61). This article also reports the results of tests to determine the capacity of the above-mentioned viruses to infect monkey-kidney cultures and to produce plaques in chick-embryo fibroblasts. It concludes with a discussion of problems connected with the classification and nomenclature of these viruses.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- ANTIGENIC VARIANTS OF INFLUENZA A2 VIRUS.1964
- A simple plaque-inhibition test for the study of arthropod-borne viruses.1960
- Methods and procedures for use of complement-fixation technique in type- and strain-specific diagnosis of influenza.1959
- Resistance to Desiccation in Intertidal BarnaclesScience, 1957
- Nutrition of Animal Cells in Tissue Culture. I. Initial Studies on a Synthetic Medium.,Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1950