Abstract

The paper describes the first overt attempt to establish an insect cell line ( Spodoptera frugiperda), persistently infected with its homologous baculovirus. The persistently infected cells were morphologically different and grew to a higher density than the noninfected parent line. The parent line, however, had a shorter doubling time. Persistently infected cells were passaged 40 times over 10 months; they still continued to produce infectious virus and polyhedral inclusion bodies. However, the infectious viral titer was ca. 100 times lower in the persistently infected line than in the parent line; also, the number of inclusion bodies was reduced ca. 98%. Interference with both homologous and heterologous baculoviruses was demonstrated in the persistently infected cell line. Sevently percent of the persistently infected cells contained antigens for S. frugiperda nuclear polyhedrosis virus, ca. 1% of the cells showed infectious viral centers, and ca. 3% of the cells contained inclusion bodies. Although the inclusion bodies from the persistently infected cells were infectious for S. frugiperda larvae, they were about 3 times less infectious than the inclusion bodies produced in the parent line.

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