Handbuch der Virusforschung
Erste Hälfte
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Chapter
In 1931, Woodruff and Goodpasture reported that the virus of fowl-pox could be grown on the chorioallantois of the develo** chick, and that proliferative lesions containing typical inclusion bodies were produce...
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IT has been observed that emulsions in saline of the lesions produced on the chorioallantois by the virus of infectious ectromelia of mice have the capacity of agglutinating fowl erythrocytes. As is the case w...
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In previous work from this laboratory it has been found that the action of influenza viruses on red cells can be paralleled in almost complete detail by an enzyme produced by V. cholerce1 (Stone, 1947). In the co...
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FOR a number of years it has been known in this laboratory that hæmolysis of moderate degree may occur when red cells are being treated with the viruses of mumps and Newcastle disease. This is not characterist...
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There are two aspects to any discussion of variation amongst the influenza viruses. On the one hand there are the directly observable changes in character that occur in the course of experimental manipulation ...
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THERE is good evidence that the filamentous forms characteristic of many recently isolated strains of influenza A are infective units1; but their significance in relation to the process of influenza virus replica...
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Chapter
Genetics is concerned with the manner in which the characteristics of an organism are transmitted to its descendants. In view of the near universality of sexual reproduction in organisms of human interest, it ...
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IT now seems clear that preparations of infective ‘ribonucleic acid’ can be obtained from crude preparations of many animal viruses, although Colter et al. have reported failure with Bunyamwera virus preparations
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WHEN leucocytes from the blood of a fowl more than a few weeks old are placed on the chorioallantois of standard 12-day chick embryos, focal proliferative lesions are produced. These are well developed at four...
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FOR some time we have been studying various manifestations of the reaction induced in chick embryos by the inoculation of leucocytes from normal fowls (the Simonsen phenomenon) with special interest in the pro...
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This article is a slightly up-dated version of the presidential address to the Australian Society of Immunologists given by Sir Macfarlane Burnet in December 1967. He suggests that the mammalian immune system ...
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Recent work on cancer immunity suggests that the character and diversity of cell membrane antigens may be controlled by processes similar to those concerned with the origin of specific patterns in the immune s...
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Compatibility in colonial tunicates and coelenterates and self-incompatibility in flowering plants are primitive examples of “self” and “not-self” recognition which are not analogous to the immunological proce...
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The extreme polymorphism of the histo-compatibility antigens may have evolved to ensure that the body of an individual is not invaded by cells from another individual of the same species.