Detection of hepatitis A virus RNA and capsid antigen in individual cells.

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Autores
Categoría Estudio primario
RevistaVirus research
Año 1989
The replication of hepatitis A virus (HAV) RNA and the production of HAV VP1 protein were examined in cultures of BS-C-1 cells under one-step growth conditions by in situ hybridization and immunofluorescence. Individual cells that had undergone active viral RNA replication were detectable at 24 h post-infection. During subsequent days, increasing numbers of cells began replicating viral RNA, so that by seven days post-infection, all cells had accumulated significant amounts of viral RNA. The results show that the protracted replication cycle of HAV in cultured cells represents a slow recruitment of infected cells into a replication mode, rather than an inherently slow virus reproduction in all cells. With the reagents utilized in this study, nucleic acid hybridization was more sensitive than antigen detection by immunofluorescence or immunoblot analysis.
Epistemonikos ID: 4374576731df097aaf6b6bd288226a7d46e31b5a
First added on: Oct 13, 2024