Publications by authors named "Pivanova G"

Previously different authors described various flavivirus mutants with high affinity to cell glycosaminoglycans and low neuroinvasiveness in mice that were obtained consequently passages in cell cultures or in ticks. In present study the analysis of TBEV isolates has shown existence of GAG-binding variants in natural virus population. Affinity to GAG has been evaluated by sorption on heparin-Sepharose.

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The metamorphosis of tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV)-induced I. ricinus nymphs under long-day photoperiodic conditions (18 light hours and 6 darkness hours) occurs more rapidly than in uninfected specimens. The infected nymphs begin to develop to the imagoes 25-33 days earlier than do uninfected ones.

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A comparative assessment of the protective properties of virion (VA) and nonvirion ("soluble") (NA) antigens of tick-borne encephalitis virus prepared as inactivated samples close in their parameters to vaccine preparations was carried out. The NA in the preparations free from VA or containing only trace, nonprotective amounts of it, was shown to have significantly lower protective properties than VA and exerted no booster effect on the protective activity when added to VA preparations.

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Analysis of the results of the laboratory diagnosis of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) by HI test over many years proved a statistically significant decrease by the 80's in the intensity of humoral immunity in the subjects with a history of tick-borne encephalitis in Kemerovo Province, Udmurtia and Latvia. A decrease in antihemagglutinin levels in the blood of convalescents after TBE was detected in endemic foci located in different geographical regions differing by epidemiological parameters; it did not depend on the portion of infected ticks and ratio of the clinical forms of the disease in a focus. Parallel tests by HI of the diagnostic value of several antigens of TBE virus strains isolated from different sources in different regions with sera from TBE patients revealed no differences among them.

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Data are presented on the use of direct and indirect enzyme-immunoassay (EIA) in the study of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus. EIA has been shown to be considerably more effective than the conventional CFT and HI tests exceeding them in sensitivity by 50-150 times both in studies of the antigenic activity of various preparations and in examinations of human sera. The possibility of testing various antigenic substrates makes EIA a universal method suitable for numerous studies.

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Large-scale examinations of specimens from natural foci of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) demonstrated that sensitivity of solid-phase enzyme immunoassay (EIA) in detecting TBE virus antigen was as high as that of the fluorescent antibody technique. The EIA takes less time and may be used for examinations of specimens after a preliminary passage in cell cultures. The EIA was also shown to be highly effective in the detection of TBE virus antigen in the cerebral tissue of patients post mortem and in the confirmation of the clinical diagnosis.

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A comparative study of over 200 tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus strains isolated from patients and ticks in different regions varying in the proportion of severe clinical forms of TBE was carried out. The strains were tested for their pathogenicity for white mice, cytopathic and plaque-forming properties as well as for the interferon-inducing capacity in SPEV cells. All the strains were found to be highly neurovirulent for mice, to produce plaques with diameters varying form less than 1 to 10 mm, and to induce interferon production in SPEV cell.

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