The properties of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus persisting for 90-383 days after intracerebral and subcutaneous inoculation of Macaca rhesus monkeys were studied, namely (1) the type of infection produced directly in the tissues of the experimental monkeys; (2) the activating effect of co-cultivation and explantation procedures; and (3) the phenotype of the isolates by a set of markers. The virus was detected and analysed in 52 instances. Directly in monkey tissues the virus induced a productive infection rarely (5.8%) but more frequently (71.2%) an abortive infection detectable by immunofluorescence (presence of virus-specific antigen). In 23% of instances a nonproductive infection was observed in monkey tissues. Like abortive infection it could be activated by the co-cultivation of cells and explantation procedures. The latter exerted a more marked activating effect than co-cultivation. The strains isolated from monkey tissues in productive infection or activated by explanation or co-cultivation were heterogeneous in their properties. The following virus phenotypes were found: virus highly virulent for mice, cytocidal and antigenically complete; a cytocidal virus of low virulence, possessing haemagglutinin; and a cytocidal virus apathogenic for mice, devoid of haemagglutinin but synthesizing complement-fixing antigen and an antigen detectable by immunofluorescence.
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