Pig erythrocyte ghost cells used for concentration of enteric viruses from experimentally contaminated clinical specimens.
Department of Food Engineering, Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa.
Journal Article: Journal of Medical Virology (impact factor: 2.47). 01/1990; 29(4):256-60.
Abstract
A simple, rapid and efficient procedure of virus concentration from urine, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and feces was developed. Pig erythrocyte ghost cells were used to adsorb and elute such viruses as poliovirus LSC-1, echovirus 6, and human rotavirus (clinical isolate). In urine and CSF, the adsorption efficiency range was 80-100% and elution was from 85% to greater than 100%. In addition, poliovirus LSC-1 was used as an experimental model to examine this procedure under various clinical conditions, such as calcium, glucose, amino acids, and urea at high concentrations. These were added to normal urine specimens to simulate pathological conditions. The results suggest that pig erythrocyte ghost cells are an efficient matrix for adsorption and elution of enteric viruses found in clinical specimens of urine, CSF, and feces. This method might be useful in virus concentration from clinical specimens and for preparative microscopy and other clinical laboratory methods that require subsequent virus concentration.
Source: PubMed
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Keywords
adsorption efficiency range
amino acids
cerebrospinal fluid
clinical isolate
clinical laboratory methods
clinical specimens
CSF
echovirus 6
efficient matrix
efficient procedure
enteric viruses
greater
human rotavirus
normal urine specimens
pig erythrocyte ghost cells
preparative microscopy
require subsequent virus concentration
simulate pathological conditions
urine
various clinical conditions

