Fer de Lance virus (FDLV): a probable paramyxovirus isolated from a reptile.

A new virus has been isolated by inoculation of lung tissues of diseased snakes into snake embryos. Homogenates of infected embryo tissues caused c.p.e. in cell cultures incubated at 30 degrees C. The virus replicates in a wide variety of reptilian or mammalian cell types incubated at 30 degrees C, inducing either syncytium formation or minimal or no cytopathic changes. Efficient replication occurs in embryonated hens' eggs at 27 to 30 degrees C. The virus haemagglutinates guinea pig and chick erythrocytes; it possesses a neuraminidase similar to the receptor-destroying enzyme of Vibrio cholera. Electron microscopic observations of infected cells examined in thin section revealed pleomorphic viruses 146 to 321 nm in diam. resembling known myxoviruses. Internal nucleocapsid strands are 15 to 16 nm in diam.; nucleocapsid observed in negatively stained preparations measures 14 nm in diam. The virus was determined to possess a nucleoprotein core containing a 50S single-stranded unsegmented RNA genome. All characters of the virus are similar to those of the paramyxovirus group except that the nucleocapsid diam. is intermediate between that of paramyxoviruses and pneumoviruses. The virus is antigenically distinct from known myxoviruses and is unique among myxoviruses in its restriction to growth at temperature below 37 degrees C.

[1]  H. Clark,et al.  Morphogenesis of Fer-de-Lance virus (FDLV) cultured at optimal (30 °C) cell growth temperature , 1979 .

[2]  H. Clark,et al.  Fish Rhabdovirus Replication in Non-Piscine Cell Culture: New System for the Study of Rhabdovirus-Cell Interaction in Which the Virus and Cell Have Different Temperature Optima , 1975, Infection and immunity.

[3]  J. P. Davis,et al.  Derivation and biologic properties of cell lines from ophidian tissues. , 1973, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[4]  D. Karzon,et al.  Terrapene heart (TH-1), a continuous cell line from the heart of the box turtle Terrapene carolina. , 1967, Experimental cell research.

[5]  M. Debakey,et al.  A paramyxovirus isolated from human atheromatous lesion. , 1965, Experimental and molecular pathology.

[6]  M. Gravell,et al.  A PERMANENT CELL LINE FROM THE FATHEAD MINNOW (PIMEPHALES PROMELAS) * , 1965, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[7]  C. Shepard,et al.  EFFECT OF ENVIRONMENTAL TEMPERATURES ON INFECTION WITH MYCOBACTERIUM MARINUM (BALNEI) OF MICE AND A NUMBER OF POIKILOTHERMIC SPECIES , 1963, Journal of bacteriology.

[8]  K. Wolf,et al.  Established Eurythermic Line of Fish Cells in vitro , 1962, Science.

[9]  H. M. Rose,et al.  STRUCTURE AND DEVELOPMENT OF VIRUSES OBSERVED IN THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE , 1956, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[10]  J. F. Mccrea,et al.  Modification of human red cells by virus action; the receptor gradient for virus action in human red cells. , 1946, British journal of experimental pathology.

[11]  R. Kirschstein,et al.  Cultivation of cells from a fibroma in a rattlesnake, Crotalus horridus. , 1972, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[12]  W. Henle,et al.  Methods and procedures for use of complement-fixation technique in type- and strain-specific diagnosis of influenza. , 1959, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.