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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (gastroenteritis)
11,398 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Characteristics of four transmissible gastroenteritis (TGE) virus field strains (Miller, Purdue, Bl, and V203) and four cell culture-attenuated strains (Purdue, SH, CKp, and Bl) were studied to find methods of differentiation between the two groups of viruses. TGE field virus strains did not replicate as well as attenuated strains at 37 C and could not be passaged serially for more than four to six passages at 33 C. There were clear differences in plaque size when the strains were compared. Field strains had average plaque sizes ranging from 3.59 to 3.15 mm, whereas attenuated strains induced plaques that were larger than 4.2 mm. Variations were observed in stability of strains at pH 3.0. Field strains and cell culture-attenuated strains CKp-270 and SH-114 were reduced in titer by about 1 log10. A reduction of about 3 log10, however, was obtained with cell culture strains B1-300 and Purdue-113.
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PMID:In vitro differentiation and pH sensitivity of field and cell culture-attentuated strains of transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 0 60

Methanol precipitation of transmissible gastroenteritis virus was tested at Ph 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, and 7.0 and at methanol concentrations of 15%, 25%, and 30%. Supernatant and precipitate fractions were tested for complement-fixing and agar-diffusion soluble antigens and plaque-forming units, and were examined by electron microscopy. Virus could be obtained free of detectable agar-diffusion antigens and most of the complement-fixing antigens. Most of the virions were without peplomers after methanol treatment but they retained infectivity.
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PMID:Methanol precipitation of transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 4 7

A continuous line of swine testes cell culture monolayers was infected at various ages with both cell culture-adapted transmissible gastroenteritis (TGE) virus and tissue infected with TGE virus. Both produced increasing numbers of plaques as the cell monolayers aged from two to five days. Therefore, allowing the swine testes cell monolayer to age five to six days before inoculation should increase the likelihood of detecting TGE virus by plaque assay.
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PMID:Transmissible gastroenteritis (TGE) of swine: effect of age of swine testes cells culture monolayers on plaque assays of TGE virus. 16 72

Strains of the swine transmissive gastroenteritis (TGE) virus were isolated for the first time in Bulgaria in 1972. The dynamics was followed up of some strains' propagation in primary cell cultures of kidney tissue and subcultures of the thyroid of pigs. The intracellular virus reached highest titers at the 24--48th hour in the kidney cells, and at the 24--36th hour in the thyroid cells, while the extracellular virus was subjected to inactivation by the 2nd hour after infecting the cultures, by the 4--6th h its titer dropped up to 50 per cent of its initial value, and by the 24th h it was completely inactivated. The viability of the virus was tested after freeze-drying and after it had been stored at 4degreesC and--20degreesC. It was found that chloroform fully inactivates the virus at 4degreesC for 24 hours. The same results were obtained with the use of sodium desoxycholate. The strains isolated in this country form plaques, and with some strains the plaques are of a varying size. Halogenic desoxyuridines (IUDR, BUDR), as well as 8-azoridine do not suppress the multiplication of the tested TGE strains even in high concentrations. Inhibitory effect has 5-bromurazyl which in given concentrations affects the titer of the virus and the size of the plaques formed. Two Bulgarian and two reference strains have lowered their plaque-forming titer by 2 log after being treated with rifamycin-B or rifampicin.
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PMID:[Some properties of strains of the transmissible gastroenteritis virus of swine (TGE) isolated in Bulgaria]. 17 55

The pathogenicity of a cell culture-attenuated strain of transmissible gastroenteritis virus for newborn pigs was investigated. Newborn (1- to 2-day-old) pigs were orally given 2 x 10(6) plaque-forming units of attenuated virus. All pigs developed mild diarrhea, but deaths did not occur. As determined by immunofluorescence and villous atropy, infection of the small intestine was limited to the caudal 50 to 66%. Fluorescing cells and atrophic villi were seen from 2 to 3 days until 6 to 7 days after exposure. Attenuated virus-exposed pigs produced circulating virus-neutralizing antibodies detectable as early as 5 days after exposure. By contrast, all pigs orally given 1 x 10(2) pig infective doses of virulent transmissible gastroenteritis virus developed severe diarrhea, and almost all of those not killed died within 2 to 5 days after exposure. In the latter pigs, the entire length of the small intestine, except for the first 4 to 5 cm, was infected with virus by 24 to 36 hours after exposure.
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PMID:Pathogenicity of an attenuated strain of transmissible gastroenteritis virus for newborn pigs. 17 6

A plaquing system and plaque neutralization test in porcine thyroid cells were used to study different transmissible gastroenteritis isolates and hemagglutinating encephalomyelitis virus. Among transmissible gastroenteritis virus isolates, plaque size varied considerably and mixed size ranges sometimes occurred. The most recently isolated viruses produced smaller plaques than the laboratory viruses or hemagglutinating encephalomyelitis virus. All transmissible gastroenteritis virus isolates reacted in the plaque neutralization test with a transmissible gastroenteritis virus antiserum which showed no activity against hemagglutinating encephalomyelitis virus. Plaque neutralization results both from experimentally infected pigs and following a field outbreak demonstrated the reliability of this test and its greater sensitivity than the conventional tube test.
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PMID:Transmissible gastroenteritis virus: plaques and a plaque neutralization test. 18 96

Groups of two or three day old pigs were inoculated intravenously with cell culture grown transmissible gastroenteritis virus. A single or a multiple dosage schedule was used. The magnitude of immune response was measured in terms of serum neutralization indices. A single dose of relatively attenuated virus caused mild clinical signs of transmissible gastroenteritis infection in the pigs and induced a low level of antibody in the serum by the seventh day after inoculation. Repeated injections of virus at seven day intervals stimulated little increase in antibody titers. However, high serum antibody titers were obtained for all pigs if the time interval between injections was extended to 15 days. Sera obtained early after exposure to live transmissible gastroenteritis virus contained mainly IgM antibody whereas sera obtained later after exposure contained mainly IgG antibody. Ten plaque purified isolates of transmissible gastroenteritis virus, comprising eight American isolates, one Japanese isolate and one British isolate were indistinguishable by means of reciprocal plaque reduction neutralization tests.
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PMID:Antibody response in pigs inoculated with transmissible gastroenteritis virus and cross reactions among ten isolates. 18 97

Intestinal and cell culture-adapted viral populations of transmissible gastroenteritis (TGE) of swine were compared by means of sucrose gradient centrifugation, immunnofluorescence, electron microscopy, immune electron microscopy, statistical analysis of the number of plaque-forming units, and ultraviolet sensitivity. Results indicated that the size range and general coronavirus morphologic characteristics were shared by both viral populations. Marked morphologic variations existed among particles from both populations. Unlike the cell culture-adapted virus, the Illinois virus of intestinal origin was infractions representing 2 bands of infectivity which were isolated by the sucrose gradient centrifugation method. The intestinal and cell culture-adapted TGE viruses were similar in antigenicity and in sensitivity to ultraviolet irradiation. There was no indication of a 2nd virus in addition to the coronavirus described as the cause of TGE.
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PMID:Comparison of intestinal (Illinois strain) and cell culture-adapted (M-HP strain) viral populations of transmissible gastroenteritis of swine. 20 Nov 84

Colostrum from sows and gilts inoculated with virulent transmissible gastroenteritis virus was fractionated into the 3 major immunoglobulin classes, IgA, IgG, and IgM-IgA fractions, by chromatographic and gel-filtration procedures. Each fraction was assayed for purity with rabbit anti-porcine serum and rabbit monospecific anti-porcine IgG, anti-porcine IgA, and anti-porcine IgM. These analyses showed that the IgG and IgA fractions were pure. The IgM fraction contained some IgA in the polymeric form and was designated the IgM-IgA fraction. Each Ig was assayed for virus-neutralizing activity on swine testes cells by the plaque-reduction method before and after conjugation with fluorescein isothiocyanate. On the basis of activity per milligram of protein, the virus-neutralizing titers were 1:641, 1:44, and 1:6.8 for the IgA, IgG, and IgM-IgA fractions respectively; the fluorescent antibody titers were 1:31.3, 1:0.1, and 1:15.6, respectively, for the same Ig.
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PMID:Colostral IgA, IgG, and IgM-IgA fractions as fluorescent antibody for the detection of the coronavirus of transmissible gastroenteritis. 21 88

A small plaque (SP) variant transmissible gastroenteritis (TGE) virus strain that may be useful in the control of TGE in swine has been developed and tested. This strain was derived from a persistently infected swine leukocyte cell line originally infected with a virulent TGE virus. The SP viral strain was avirulent for 3-day-old susceptible pigs and pregnant gilts. The SP virus elicited protective antibody when inoculated into pregnant gilts oral/intranasally, or intramammarily, or by both of these routes. The morbidity and mortality of their passively immune suckling pigs were 62% and 14%, respectively.
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PMID:Small plaque variant transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 21 9


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