MICRO DIFFUSION PRECIPITIN TESTS FOR ENTEROVIRUSES AND INFLUENZA B VIRUS

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Middleton, G. K., Jr. (Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, N.C.), H. G. Cramblett, H. L. Moffet, J. P. Black, and H. Shulenberger. Micro diffusion precipitin tests for enteroviruses and influenza B virus. J. Bacteriol. 87:1171–1176. 1964.—A simple micro precipitin gel diffusion test has been adapted to the study of viral antigens. As far as is known from a review of recent literature, this is the first use of the ECHO viruses in precipitin tests and the first attempt to demonstrate by the gel diffusion technique precipitins in a patient's serum after natural virus infection rather than artificial immunization. The principal value of this technique in virology is the rapid identification or qualitative analysis of viral antigen preparations by use of pooled or specific hyperimmune sera. Virus concentrations of 107tcid50 per 0.1 ml are required for reliable results, but only 0.015 ml of serum is necessary for each test. Virus-serum precipitin reactions were type-specific except for reciprocal precipitation of ECHO 1 and ECHO 8 by their hyperimmune sera. No viral antigens have been found common to two or more virus types among those tested. Precipitins for viral antigens occur frequently in serum of patients after a viral infection and are readily detected by micro precipitin gel diffusion tests. However, this precipitin test remains at present a tool for virus and antigen identification and offers an approach for research appraisal of host response to infections.

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