Literature DB >> 4340220

Poxviruses isolated from clinically ill and asymptomatically infected monkeys and a chimpanzee.

S S Marennikova, E M Seluhina, N N Mal'ceva, I D Ladnyj.   

Abstract

Poxviruses were isolated from the kidneys of an outwardly healthy chimpanzee trapped in an area of the Democratic Republic of the Congo where a case of monkeypox had recently occurred in man, from the kidneys of clinically healthy cynomolgus monkeys in a colony in the Netherlands, and from monkeys suffering from monkeypox during outbreaks in colonies in the USA. It was established that two of the three viruses isolated from animals asymptomatically infected-namely, strain Chimp-9 from the chimpanzee and strain 64-7255 from the cynomolgus monkeys-although similar to one another differed markedly from the classical Copenhagen strain of monkeypox virus. These two viruses were characterized by the formation of small, monomorphic, well-defined pocks without haemorrhages on infected chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane, by the small plaques of the proliferative type that they produced in cell cultures, by the absence of reactions when they were applied to scarified rabbit skin and the absence of marked necrosis when they were inoculated intradermally into rabbits, by their intensive replication in pig embryo kidney cell cultures, and by a number of other features. It is therefore possible to describe both the viruses as being very close to the variola virus. The Chimp-9 and 64-7255 strains differed from the variola virus only in their greater pathogenicity for white mice after intracerebral inoculation. The other virus isolated from a symptomless cynomolgus monkey-strain 64-9411-resembled the two viruses isolated from monkeys suffering from monkeypox and did not differ from the Copenhagen strain.

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Year:  1972        PMID: 4340220      PMCID: PMC2480788     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull World Health Organ        ISSN: 0042-9686            Impact factor:   9.408


  3 in total

1.  Studies on a pox disease of monkeys. II. Isolation of the etiologic agent.

Authors:  J E PRIER; R M SAUER; R G MALSBERGER; J M SILLAMAN
Journal:  Am J Vet Res       Date:  1960-05       Impact factor: 1.156

2.  A human infection caused by monkeypox virus in Basankusu Territory, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Authors:  I D Ladnyj; P Ziegler; E Kima
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  1972       Impact factor: 9.408

3.  Isolation and properties of the causal agent of a new variola-like disease (monkeypox) in man.

Authors:  S S Marennikova; E M Seluhina; N N Mal'ceva; K L Cimiskjan; G R Macevic
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  1972       Impact factor: 9.408

  3 in total
  21 in total

1.  Eradication of smallpox: the critical year ahead.

Authors:  D A Henderson
Journal:  Proc R Soc Med       Date:  1973-06

2.  Possible antigenic sub-divisions within the variola/vaccinia subgroup of poxviruses.

Authors:  D Baxby
Journal:  Arch Virol       Date:  1977       Impact factor: 2.574

Review 3.  Poxvirus hosts and reservoirs. Brief review.

Authors:  D Baxby
Journal:  Arch Virol       Date:  1977       Impact factor: 2.574

4.  Differentiation of variola, monkeypox, and vaccinia antisera by radioimmunoassay.

Authors:  H D Hutchinson; D W Ziegler; D E Wells; J H Nakano
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  1977       Impact factor: 9.408

5.  A review of experimental and natural infections of animals with monkeypox virus between 1958 and 2012.

Authors:  Scott Parker; R Mark Buller
Journal:  Future Virol       Date:  2013-02-01       Impact factor: 1.831

6.  Differentiation of smallpox and camelpox viruses in cultures of human and monkey cells.

Authors:  D Baxby
Journal:  J Hyg (Lond)       Date:  1974-04

7.  Monkeypox.

Authors: 
Journal:  Br Med J       Date:  1973-01-06

8.  Can variola-like viruses be derived from monkeypox virus? An investigation based on DNA mapping.

Authors:  J J Esposito; J H Nakano; J F Obijeski
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  1985       Impact factor: 9.408

9.  Human monkeypox.

Authors:  S O Foster; E W Brink; D L Hutchins; J M Pifer; B Lourie; C R Moser; E C Cummings; O E Kuteyi; R E Eke; J B Titus; E A Smith; J W Hicks; W H Foege
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  1972       Impact factor: 9.408

10.  Poxvirus infection of the baboon (Papio cynocephalus).

Authors:  R L Heberling; S S Kalter; A R Rodriguez
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  1976       Impact factor: 9.408

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