STUDIES ON THE COMMON COLD : VI. CULTIVATION OF THE VIRUS IN TISSUE MEDIUM.

J Exp Med

Department of Medicine, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, and the Presbyterian Hospital, New York.

Published: March 1936

AI Article Synopsis

  • Research on cultivating the common cold virus reveals effective isolation and preservation methods to induce infections in humans.
  • The virus can survive in nasopharyngeal washings for up to 13 days at cold temperatures and for at least 4 months when frozen and dried.
  • While the virus can multiply in chick embryo tissue cultures, prolonged cultivation leads to a loss of activity unless careful transfer intervals are maintained.

Article Abstract

1. Studies of the cultivation of the virus of common cold in tissue medium, and the capacity of the culture virus to induce infection in human volunteers are reported. 2. Detailed descriptions are given of the methods employed to isolate the virus, preserve and cultivate it, and to test its activity in human volunteers. 3. The virus of common cold can easily be isolated from properly selected patients and cultivated in tissue medium. 4. When kept in the original nasopharyngeal washings, the virus will survive at ice box temperature under anaerobic conditions for at least 13 days. 5. If the nasopharyngeal washings are frozen and dried in vacuo, the virus retains its activity for at least 4 months. 6. The virus of common cold has been proven to multiply in medium containing chick embryo tissue. Such cultures retain their capacity to produce typical infections in human beings for many transfers involving a period of several months. Attempts to cultivate the virus have been successful in seven out of eight instances. 7. Prolonged cultivation of the virus in tissue medium eventually leads to a loss of activity. 8. Strains of virus under cultivation maintain their potency best when transfers are made at 2 and 3 day intervals. 9. After removal from the incubator a culture of virus rapidly becomes inactive whether it be kept under seal in the ice box or frozen and dried in vacuo. 10. The destructive action of the medium can be prevented if the culture is mixed with gum acacia before freezing and drying in vacuo.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2133354PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1084/jem.63.4.559DOI Listing

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