Recombination between two strains of vaccinia virus
Abstract
Two strains of vaccinia virus were selected
which differed by five separate markers: pock
morphology on the chorioallantoic membrane of the
chick embryo, the production of haemagglutinin,
heat resistance, mouse virulence when inoculated
intracerebrally and type of skin lesion produced
in the rabbit.
homogeneous for the five markers, and that the
markers were stable on pure culture passage.
cultures were infected with mixtures of the two
strains and an analysis was made of the progeny of
such infections. One hundred and forty-nine
progeny clones were isolated, and of these seventeen
differed from both parental strains in their
marker characteristics.
It is believed that these arose by genetic
recombination. Intermediates were found for the markers:
pock morphology, mouse virulence and type of rabbit
skin lesion, whereas haemagglutinin production and
heat resistance appeared to be all-or-none characters.
A preliminary analysis was made of single
HeLa cell yields and of the proportion of heat
resistant recombinants to the total progeny.
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