STUDIES ON THE FACTORS ESSENTIAL TO THE INITIATION AND MAINTENANCE OF MULTIPLICATION OF PSITTACOSIS VIRUS (6BC STRAIN) IN DEFICIENT CELLS IN TISSUE CULTURE
Open Access
- 1 May 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 99 (5) , 461-479
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.99.5.461
Abstract
The growth of psittacosis virus (6BC) was studied in cultures of minced whole chick embryo tissue maintained in either Hanks-Simms solution or Hanks's balanced salt solution (BSS), and in neither medium could sustained, long-term virus growth take place. Addition of beef embryo extract (BEE) to cultures at a time when virus multiplication was declining reversed this general trend and resulted in greater virus growth. This virus-stimulating action of BEE was only partially diminished by colchicine, a mitotic inhibitor, indicating that the action of BEE was not due entirely to the development of a larger population of cells as a result of its enhancement of cell proliferation. Chick embryo tissue cultivated for 13 days in BSS prior to infection lost its ability to support the growth of psittacosis virus, but this capacity could be restored by the addition of BEE, alone or with colchicine, at the time of infection. A significant amount of virus was adsorbed to tissue in BSS alone, indicating that the failure of virus to grow in depleted tissue maintained only in BSS after infection was not due entirely to failure of virus to attach to and invade the cells. It was found that an ultrafiltrate and a dialysate of BEE contained the major part of the stimulating capacity of the whole extract, indicating that the active materials were substances of low molecular weights. Autoclaved lactalbumin hydrolysate was an active stimulator, suggesting that the materials responsible for its activity were relatively heat-stable. Since a chemically defined medium (Parker 199) was equally effective in stimulating viral growth, it should be possible eventually to define the chemical nature of the virus stimulators. The implications of the findings are discussed with special reference to their application in the study of tissue tropisms and of latency in viral infections of cells.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- STUDIES ON THE PSITTACOSIS-LYMPHOGRANULOMA GROUPThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1953
- CULTIVATION OF POLIOMYELITIS VIRUS IN TISSUE CULTURE IV. FURTHER OBSERVATIONS ON VIRUS PROPAGATION IN HUMAN TISSUES WITH A SYNTHETIC NUTRIENT MEDIUMCanadian Journal of Medical Sciences, 1953
- Poliomyelitis Viruses in Tissue Culture. IV. Protein-Free Nutrient Media in Stationary and Roller Tube Cultures.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1952
- STUDIES ON THE PSITTACOSIS-LYMPHOGRANULOMA GROUPThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1952
- Observations on growth of virus and the energy-yielding activities of the host cellArchiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, 1952
- Human Carrier of the Psittacosis VirusThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1951
- The prostatic smear; cell changes after estrogen therapy.1950
- Nutrition of Animal Cells in Tissue Culture. I. Initial Studies on a Synthetic Medium.,Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1950
- Relation of Oxygen and Temperature in the Preservation of Tissues by RefrigerationExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1949
- Recovery of Psittacosis Virus from Chicks Hatched from Inoculated Eggs.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1949