Abstract

Neutralization tests, employing the cytopathogenic effect in tissue culture tubes, with a variety of homotypic antisera and strains of Coxsackie B viruses often yielded high titers in early readings and low titers in late readings — the “break-through” phenomenon — and occasionally also low, early-reading titers with heterologous, homotypic sera, which gave high titers with the homologous strains. Of 27 strains of Goxsackie B 1 to B 5, that were tested, 10 showed no break-through tendency while others showed varying degrees of break-through, without reference to any evidence of intratypic antigenic variation. There was a positive correlation between a small number of tissue culture passages away from man or mouse brain and the break-through tendency. Moreover, strains without break-through tendency yielded viral populations with marked break-through properties after a single intracerebral passage in newborn mice, and even after two subsequent tissue culture passages. Plaque-purified progeny exhibited the break-through phenomenon to the same extent as the original, unpurified cultures.

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