Inability of Japanese rubella vaccines to induce antibody response in rabbits is due to growth restriction at 39° C
- 31 August 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Archiv für die gesamte Virusforschung
- Vol. 83 (3-4) , 217-227
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01309918
Abstract
We have compared the kinetic growth patterns of To-336, MEQ11, KRT, and SK2 rubella vaccine strains licensed in Japan at 37° and 39° C with those of progenitor wild strains of rubella virus. The growth of vaccine strains was depressed at 39° C to a level about 3 log10 lower than that at 37° C. The difference in virus titer attained by wild strains at 37° and 39° C was less than tenfold. The growth potential at 39° C paralleled the immunogenic marker of rubella virus,i.e. the capability of virus to induce antibody response upon subcutaneous injection in rabbits for all wild and vaccine strains examined, including one strain at an intermediate level of attenuation. Several clones were isolated from the progeny produced by a vaccine strain during the growth at 39° C. Among them were partial revertants in immunogenic marker as well as in the growth potential at 39° C. It was concluded that the immunogenic marker of rubella virus in rabbits represented its capability to replicate at the body temperature of the animal.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
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