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Changes in some biophysical characteristics of African horsesickness virus (no. 3922) during attenuation

African horsesickness virus (No.3922, Type 7), attenuated for the horse by serial passage in suckling mouse brain, was studied at various passage levels to determine whether any change in the biophysical characters of the infectious particles had occurred. during the process of attenuation. Such cha...

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Main Author: Russell, B.W
Other Authors: Kipps, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Animal Demography Unit (ADU) 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Russell, B.W
author2 Kipps, A
author_browse Kipps, A
Russell, B.W
author_facet Kipps, A
Russell, B.W
author_sort Russell, B.W
collection Thesis
description African horsesickness virus (No.3922, Type 7), attenuated for the horse by serial passage in suckling mouse brain, was studied at various passage levels to determine whether any change in the biophysical characters of the infectious particles had occurred. during the process of attenuation. Such changes were indeed observed. Propagation of the virus in tissue culture was accomplished only after the modification of standard culture media by the addition of egg white, a complex substance containing a number of proteins including the enzyme lysozyme. Some evidence is presented to show that the presence of egg white materially assisted in the successful cultivation of horsesickness virus; as well as in the formation of plaques in monolayers ·of cultured cells. Electron micrographs of horsesickness virus obtained from these cultured cells, and the results of a study of the fine structure of infected mouse nervous tissue, are presented. A remarkable change in the buoyant density of the infectious particles of this horsesickness virus was found to occur during attenuation. The 'wild' or virulent strain was found to consist mainly of particles of density 1.26 gm/ml. The attenuated strain however proved to be composed of particles with deneities quite different from that of the wild strain, predominantly 1.21 and 1.34 gm/ml. This alteration of the buoyant appeared to be directly related to the degree of attenuation. Studies in electrophoresis using a newly designed apparatus showed that the wild strain of horsesickness virus is homogeneous in its migration in an electric field. The attenuated strain showed a changed electrophoretic pattern· indicating the presence of particles of different mobilities. As in density gradient analysis, electrophoresis showed a fundamental difference between the wild and attenuated strains of this virus. It was possible also to show a correlation between the slowly migrating component of the attenuated strain and the fraction of higher density. The sedimentation coefficient of the infectious particles of the No.3922 strain of horsesickness virus was studied at various stages of attenuation ·and the particle size at three passage levels were calculated. The particle size and other characteristics determined in this way were compared with the results of measurements obtained from ultrafiltration of the virus through collodion membranes. It was found that the diameter of the infectious particles of the attenuated strain is greater than that of the wild strain. This study shows that physical measurements may be used to give
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:21.936Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Animal Demography Unit (ADU)
publisherStr Animal Demography Unit (ADU)
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31899 Changes in some biophysical characteristics of African horsesickness virus (no. 3922) during attenuation Russell, B.W Kipps, A Polson, A. African horsesickness virus virus African horsesickness virus (No.3922, Type 7), attenuated for the horse by serial passage in suckling mouse brain, was studied at various passage levels to determine whether any change in the biophysical characters of the infectious particles had occurred. during the process of attenuation. Such changes were indeed observed. Propagation of the virus in tissue culture was accomplished only after the modification of standard culture media by the addition of egg white, a complex substance containing a number of proteins including the enzyme lysozyme. Some evidence is presented to show that the presence of egg white materially assisted in the successful cultivation of horsesickness virus; as well as in the formation of plaques in monolayers ·of cultured cells. Electron micrographs of horsesickness virus obtained from these cultured cells, and the results of a study of the fine structure of infected mouse nervous tissue, are presented. A remarkable change in the buoyant density of the infectious particles of this horsesickness virus was found to occur during attenuation. The 'wild' or virulent strain was found to consist mainly of particles of density 1.26 gm/ml. The attenuated strain however proved to be composed of particles with deneities quite different from that of the wild strain, predominantly 1.21 and 1.34 gm/ml. This alteration of the buoyant appeared to be directly related to the degree of attenuation. Studies in electrophoresis using a newly designed apparatus showed that the wild strain of horsesickness virus is homogeneous in its migration in an electric field. The attenuated strain showed a changed electrophoretic pattern· indicating the presence of particles of different mobilities. As in density gradient analysis, electrophoresis showed a fundamental difference between the wild and attenuated strains of this virus. It was possible also to show a correlation between the slowly migrating component of the attenuated strain and the fraction of higher density. The sedimentation coefficient of the infectious particles of the No.3922 strain of horsesickness virus was studied at various stages of attenuation ·and the particle size at three passage levels were calculated. The particle size and other characteristics determined in this way were compared with the results of measurements obtained from ultrafiltration of the virus through collodion membranes. It was found that the diameter of the infectious particles of the attenuated strain is greater than that of the wild strain. This study shows that physical measurements may be used to give 2020-05-18T13:39:25Z 2020-05-18T13:39:25Z 1967 2020-04-16T11:56:50Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31899 eng application/pdf Animal Demography Unit (ADU) Faculty of Science
spellingShingle African horsesickness virus
virus
Russell, B.W
Changes in some biophysical characteristics of African horsesickness virus (no. 3922) during attenuation
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Changes in some biophysical characteristics of African horsesickness virus (no. 3922) during attenuation
title_full Changes in some biophysical characteristics of African horsesickness virus (no. 3922) during attenuation
title_fullStr Changes in some biophysical characteristics of African horsesickness virus (no. 3922) during attenuation
title_full_unstemmed Changes in some biophysical characteristics of African horsesickness virus (no. 3922) during attenuation
title_short Changes in some biophysical characteristics of African horsesickness virus (no. 3922) during attenuation
title_sort changes in some biophysical characteristics of african horsesickness virus no 3922 during attenuation
topic African horsesickness virus
virus
url https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31899
work_keys_str_mv AT russellbw changesinsomebiophysicalcharacteristicsofafricanhorsesicknessvirusno3922duringattenuation