scholarly journals A comparison of complement-fixation titres in poliomyelitis-infected tissue-culture fluids and mouse brains

1958 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 254-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Golda Selzer

Ultra-centrifugation of emulsions from suckling mouse brains infected with the MEF1 strain of poliomyelitis virus separates a non-infective antigen, or soluble antigen, from infective virus. This antigen is responsible for most of the complement fixation and explains the high titres obtained. On the other hand, the same virus, and also Mahoney, Type 1 poliomyelitis virus, grown in monkey kidney tissue culture, fail to produce this soluble antigen, and this is probably a factor in the low complement-fixing titres obtained in tests with these fluids.The author would like to express her appreciation of Miss M. Butchart's valuable technical assistance.

1959 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Golda Selzer

Good fixation of complement was obtained with the infective virus fraction of the Mahoney Type 1 poliomyelitis virus which had been adapted to suckling mice. The presence of a soluble antigen, specific to Type 1 virus, was also demonstrated but was small in amount.The infective virus fraction of the suckling mouse adapted MEF1 Type 2 poliomyelitis virus produced as good fixation of complement as did Type 1, but the fixation of complement by the MEF1 soluble antigen was far greater than that obtained with the Mahoney strain.The author would like to thank Prof. A. Kipps for his interest and encouragement and Miss M. Butchart for her valuable technical assistance. She is also indebted to Dr H. Malherbe of the Poliomyelitis Research Foundation, Johannesburg, for the Type 1 monkey immune serum.


1959 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 285-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Golda Selzer ◽  
M. Butchart

The Mahoney, Type 1, poliomyelitis virus had been through six to-and-fro monkey kidney-tissue culture and suckling mouse passages. Early paralysis was produced in groups of mice inoculated directly from infected tissue-culture fluid, but mouse-to-mouse passage failed to produce paralysis except in an occasional mouse. At the 7th tissue-culture mouse passage, the virus harvested from paralysed mice was inoculated into 100 mice. One mouse developed paralysis within 24 hr. From this mouse a variant of Mahoney virus was isolated which has now been through seventy-five mouse-to-mouse passages and produces paralysis in 90–100% of mice within 3 days.The authors would like to express their deep appreciation of Prof. A. Kipps' constant interest and encouragement.


1957 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 374-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Golda selzer

The Mahoney, Type I, poliomyelitis virus undergoes two ‘cycles’ of multiplication in the CNS of suckling mice—the first within 48 hr. after intracerebral inoculation, and the second approximately 10 days later. The former may not be associated with paralysis whilst the latter usually is.By to-and-fro passage in suckling mouse brain and monkey kidney-tissue culture there is a gradual increase in the amount of virus obtained during the early multiplication cycle in suckling mouse brains and associated with this is the occurrence of early paralysis in 80% or more of these mice. The virus capable of causing early paralysis in infant mice is gradually lost by direct mouse-to-mouse passage.The occurrence of two variants is postulated, one of these apparently nonparalytic and multiplying selectively in suckling brains.The author would like to thank the late Prof. M. van den Ende for his stimulating discussions and advice, Dr P. K. Olitsky of New York for his constant interest, and Mr T. C. Norcott for his able technical assistance.


1956 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Selzer ◽  
M. van den Ende

By ultracentrifugation of emulsions of brains from suckling mice infected with the MEF1 strain of poliomyelitis virus, infective virus can be separated from a non-infective soluble antigen. The soluble antigen which remains in the supernatant fluid is serologically specific and is responsible for most of the complement fixation shown by such brain emulsions.Soluble antigen is not demonstrable in the brains of adult mice infected with a strain of the virus which has not been adapted to sucklings.The soluble antigen is heat stable and resists treatment with organic lipoid solvents such as acetone, ether and chloroform.


1940 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Smadel ◽  
M. J. Wall ◽  
R. D. Baird

The soluble antigen of lymphocytic choriomeningitis which is readily separable from the virus is a relatively stable substance and appears to be of a protein nature. A specific precipitin reaction can be demonstrated when immune serum is added to solutions of antigen which have been freed of certain serologically inactive substances. The complement-fixation and precipitation reactions which occur in the presence of immune serum and non-infectious extracts of splenic tissue obtained from guinea pigs moribund with lymphocytic choriomeningitis seem to be manifestations of union of the same soluble antigen and its antibody. On the other hand, the antisoluble substance antibodies and neutralizing substances appear to be different entities.


1958 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 266-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. F. Hampton ◽  
A. Polson

The inactivation rates of tissue-culture polio virus have been determined and these have been applied to the irradiation of formalinized vaccine, as an additional inactivation process, using a simple irradiator.The antigenic potency of the vaccine was apparently unimpaired.We wish to thank the late Prof. van den Ende for his keen interest and criticism; Dr H. Malherbe and his staff for carrying out many of the titrations; Dr P. D. Winter for co-operation in irradiating samples of vaccine, and Margaret Pakes for invaluable technical assistance.


1957 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 361-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. van den Ende ◽  
A. Polson ◽  
G. S. Turner

A study has been made of the properties of soluble antigen in the brains of infant mice infected intracerebrally with the Flury strain of rabies virus.Soluble antigen is produced at the same time as infective virus, and reaches a high concentration in a period of 2–3 days.It can be partially purified by precipitation at pH 4·3. It is partially resistant to the action of trypsin, RNAse and DNAse. It is relatively stable at pH 6–10.Experimental results suggest that the soluble antigen remains antigenically active after heating at 56° C. and treatment with 0·5% phenol or 0·35% formal-dehyde, but that such heating markedly reduces the ability to stimulate formation of neutralizing antibody.Rabbits and mice appear to differ in the production of neutralizing antibody following immunization against soluble antigen in which residual live virus was inactivated by heat, phenol or formaldehyde.It is suggested that this difference may depend on the different susceptibility to traces of incompletely inactivated virus remaining in the immunizing antigens.The authors are grateful to Miss T. Madsen for her assistance in some aspects of this work. Dr N. Sapeika kindly made available facilities for the in vitro anaphylaxis experiments.Financial assistance was received from the Nkana-Kitwe and Chingola Poliomyelitis Research Funds.


1960 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Golda Selzer

A complement-fixation test for acute poliomyelitis using unheated antigens derived from suckling mouse brain infected with poliovirus Type 1 or Type 2 is described.The results of tests in 62 patients clinically diagnosed as cases of acute poliomyelitis in a recent epidemic and in 26 controls are recorded.The CF tests were positive in 100% of 53 cases with poliovirus Type 1 and/or Type 2 in stool. A positive result was obtained in 23 (76%) of 30 cases whose sera were examined in the first 7 days of illness.Negative tests of the initial serum samples were found in 15 (28·5%) of 53 cases, but all these became positive in titres of 40 or 80 on testing of convalescent serum.In 31 (69%) of 45 cases whose sera were re-tested between the 3rd and 4th weeks of illness the CF antibody levels rose, reaching titres of 80 or 160 in most instances. Of the remaining 14 cases only one dropped in insignificant degree (from titre 320 to 160) and the 13 stationary results had been positive in titres of 40–160 on initial tests most of which were performed in the 2nd week of illness.Homotypic CF antibody response without crossing was found in 37 (71%) of 52 cases with Type 1 or Type 2 virus in stool. In the cases of crossing the heterotypic antibody response was either transient, diminishing or stationary in all and in only low titre in most instances.In 26 control cases there were seven positive CF tests, but one of these was nonspecific, five were in lowest titres, and one case appeared to have had recent poliomyelitis infection.Heating the antigens did not broaden the reaction. It caused only slight loss of potency except in two cases in which the CF titre increased substantially.The antigenic preparation described appears to be superior to antigens of other origin in the diagnosis of acute poliomyelitis by complement-fixation tests, as positive tests are recognized earlier in the illness and the titres are higher. Homotypic results were obtained in all cases and no instance of false negative occurred in this series.I would like to thank the medical staff of the Cape Town City Hospital for Infectious Diseases for the trouble taken in collecting stools and paired sera, and Prof. Kipps for his interest in this work. I am indebted to Miss Karin Larssen for valuable technical assistance.


1954 ◽  
Vol 99 (6) ◽  
pp. 551-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert B. Sabin ◽  
Walter A. Hennessen ◽  
Johan Winsser

Attempts were made to "convert" highly virulent strains of the 3 immunologic types of poliomyelitis virus (Mahoney, Y-SK, and Leon) into avirulent variants. Tests involving intracerebral, intramuscular, or oral administration of virus to cynomolgus monkeys indicated that mere propagation in cultures of kidney tissue of cynomolgus monkeys had no effect on virulence when single or small numbers of virus particles were used as seed, and harvests were delayed for 24 hours or more after the appearance of cytopathogenic change. On the other hand, passages at 24 hour intervals with large inocula (105 to 106 TCD60) produced culture fluids with diminished virulence and unusual patterns of response in cynomolgus monkeys. Purification of such culture fluids by the terminal dilution technique yielded modified strains which proved to be avirulent after administration by the intracerebral, intramuscular, or oral routes in cynomolgus monkeys. Neither paralysis nor CNS lesions were found in any of more than 80 monkeys inoculated intracerebrally with various amounts of virus. However, focal neuronal lesions were found in the spinal cord of 3 of 48 monkeys inoculated intramuscularly with various amounts of the Mahoney variant, in 2 of 20 receiving the Y-SK variant, though in none of 40 inoculated with various amounts of the Leon variant. Virus recovered from the spinal cord of one of the monkeys in the Mahoney group produced no paralysis on intracerebral passage in monkeys. It is assumed that all 3 modified viruses possess a limited capacity to affect lower motor neurones of cynomolgus monkeys when these are directly exposed to them by accidental intraneural or traumatic intracerebral injection. On propagation in cynomolgus kidney cultures the modified viruses reached titers of approximately 107 TCD50 per ml., as measured by cytopathogenic activity on renal epithelial cells in vitro, yet produced no perceptible pathologic changes in the muscles, kidneys, testes, ovaries, heart, pancreas, adrenals, liver, or spleen of cynomolgus monkeys inoculated intramuscularly. The modified viruses were immunogenic after intramuscular injection, but a large proportion of cynomolgus monkeys failed to develop antibody after small doses, indicating that in this host the experimentally produced variants multiplied less readily in non-nervous tissue than the virulent parent strains. Tests with the Type 1 virus showed that the orally administered avirulent variant can induce the formation of antibody and bring about resistance to the occurrence of paralysis such as results from ingestion of the virulent, parent strain. The Types 1 and 2 modified viruses are paralytogenic in mice after direct spinal inoculation whereas the Type 3 virus is not. The Type 1 virus became paralytogenic for mice when it lost its virulence for cynomolgus monkeys by the indicated routes. The Type 2 virus lost its virulence for mice by the intracerebral but not intraspinal routes when it was still fully virulent for cynomolgus monkeys, and retained its paralytogenic activity in intraspinally inoculated mice after it had lost its virulence for cynomolgus monkeys by the indicated routes. The parent Type 3 virus was paralytogenic in intraspinally inoculated mice when it was still fully virulent for cynomolgus monkeys, but this property disappeared in the modified virus when it became avirulent for monkeys.


1950 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 277-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Hoyle

Hoyle & Fairbrother (1937) showed that tissues infected with influenza virus contained two distinct particles, the infective virus elementary body, and a smaller particle, the soluble antigen, which could be demonstrated by complement-fixation tests.


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