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1. Cultivation of viruses Virus cultivation is also referred to as propagation or growth. To cultivate virus, it is necessary to supply the virus with appropriate cells in which it can replicate. Phages are supplied with bacterial cultures, plant viruses are cultivated in special plants or in protoplasts (plant cells from which the cell wall was removed), while animal viruses may be supplied with whole organisms, such as mice, egg containing chick embryos or insect larvae. However, animal viruses are grown in cultured animal cells. Tissue and cell culture consists of cells or tissues obtained from humans, animals, or plants supplied with necessary nutrients grown in aseptic conditions (free from bacteria and fungi). Below are the kinds of cell culture flasks, plates and dishes 2. Virus isolation • Many viruses can be isolated as a result of their ability to form discrete visible zones (plaques) in layers of host cells. Plaques may form where areas of cells are killed or altered by the virus infection. Each plaque is formed when infection spreads radially from an infected cell to surrounding cells. • Plaques can be formed by many animal viruses in monolayers if the cells are overlaid with agarose gel to maintain the progeny virus in a discrete zone. Plaques can also be formed by phages in lawns of bacterial growth. • It is generally assumed that a plaque is the result of the infection of a cell by a single virion. If this is the case then all virus produced from virus in the plaque should be a clone, in other words it should be genetically identical. This clone can be referred to as an isolate, and if it is distinct from all other isolates it can be referred to as a strain. • There is a possibility that a plaque might be derived from two or more virions so, to increase the probability that a genetically pure strain of virus has been obtained, material from a plaque can be inoculated onto further monolayers and virus can be derived from an individual plaque. The virus is said to have been plaque purified. • Production of plaques by animal viruses (top). • Plaques formed by a phage in a bacterial lawn (bottom). 3. Virus purification • After a virus has been propagated it is usually necessary to remove host cell debris and other contaminants before the virus particles can be used for laboratory studies, for incorporation into a vaccine, or for some other purpose. • Virus purification can be done by centrifugation which is the most common procedure used for the purification of viruses. Partial purification can be achieved be differential centrifugation and a higher degree of purity can be achieved by density gradient centrifugation. 1. Differential centrifugation involves alternating cycles of low-speed centrifugation, after which most of the virus is still in the supernatant, and high-speed centrifugation, after which the virus is in the pellet. 2. Density gradient centrifugation involves centrifuging particles (such as virions) or molecules (such as nucleic acids) in a solution of increasing concentration, and therefore density. • Sucrose and caesium chloride are commonly used as a solute in different concentrations to form density gradient. There are two major categories of density gradient centrifugation: rate zonal and equilibrium (isopycnic) centrifugation. • In rate zonal centrifugation the virus is layered over a preformed gradient before centrifugation. Each kind of particle sediments as a zone or band through the gradient, at a rate dependent on its size, shape and density. The centrifugation is stopped while the particles are still sedimenting. • Equilibrium centrifugation, in which the gradient is formed during centrifugation, occurs when centrifugation continues until all the particles in the gradient have reached a position where their density is equal to that of the medium. This type of centrifugation separates different particles based on their different densities. 4. Structural investigations of cells and virions: I. Light microscopy: light microscopy has useful applications in detecting virus-infected cells, for example by observing cytopathic effects or by detecting a fluorescent dye linked to antibody molecules that have bound to a virus antigen (fluorescence microscopy).
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