Cultivation of Viruses
Cultivation of Viruses
Cultivation of Viruses
viruses are obligate intracellular parasites and so they cannot be grown on any inanimate culture
medium.
1. Animal inoculation:
• The earliest method for the cultivation of viruses causing human diseases was inoculation
into human volunteers.
• Reed and Colleagues (1900) used human volunteers for their pioneering work on yellow
fever.
• Theiler in 1903 used white mice for the cultivation of viruses.
2. Embryonated eggs
Embryonated hen’s egg was first used for the cultivation of viruses by Good Pasture in 1931.
The method was further developed by Burnet.
The embryonated egg offers several sites for the cultivation of viruses. -
1. Chorioallantoic membrane(CAM),
2. Allantoic cavity,
3. Amniotic sac and
4. Yolk sac
For cultivation of viruses in Yolk sac, 4-6 days incubated eggs chosen and for CAM, allantoic
cavity and amniotic sac, 10-12 days incubated eggs are selected.
a. Chorioallantoic membrane
CAM is mainly employed in the growth of pox virus. Inoculation on the chorioallantoic membrane
produces visible lesions called pocks.
Different viruses have different pock morphology. Under optimal conditions, each infectious viral
particle can form one pock.
Pock counting, therefore can be used for the assay of pock-forming viruses such as variola or
vaccinia.
Herpes simplex virus is also grown on CAM.
b. Allantoic cavity
Inoculation into allantoic cavity provides a rich yield of Influenza and some Paramyxoviruses.
Allantoic inoculation is employed for growing the Influenza virus for vaccine production.
other chick embryo vaccines in routine use are the yellow fever(17D strain) and Rabies (Flury
strain) vaccines.
c. Amniotic cavity
The amniotic sac is employed for the primary isolation of the Influenza virus and the mumps virus.
d. Yolk sac inoculation is used for the cultivation of some viruses, Chlamydiae and Rickettsiae.
Duck eggs are bigger and have a longer incubation period than hen’s eggs. They therefore provide
a better yield of Rabies virus and were used for the preparation of the inactivated non-neural
vaccine.
Advantages of Inoculation into embryonated egg
• Widely used method for the isolation of virus and growth.
• Ideal substrate for the viral growth and replication.
• Isolation and cultivation of many avian and few mammalian viruses.
• Cost effective and maintenance is much easier.
• Less labor is needed.
• The embryonated eggs are readily available.
• Sterile and wide range of tissues and fluids
• They are free from contaminating bacteria and many latent viruses.
• Specific and non-specific factors of defense are not involved in embryonated eggs.
• Widely used method to grow virus for some vaccine production.
• Cell culture is most widely used in diagnostic virology for cultivation and assays of viruses.
• The tissue culture was first applied in diagnostic virology by Steinhardt and colleagues in
1913.
• They maintained the vaccinia virus by culture in tissues of rabbit cornea. Subsequently,
Maitland (1928) used cut tissues in nutrient media for cultivation of vaccinia viruses.
• Enders, Weller, and Robins (1949) were the first to culture poliovirus in tissue cultures of
nonneural origin. Since then, most of the virus had been grown in tissue culture for
diagnosis of viral diseases.
• Different types of tissue cultures are used to grow viruses. Tissue culture can be of three
different types as follows:
Types of tissue culture
1. Organ Culture
In this method, small bits of the organs are maintained in vitro for days and weeks preserving their
original morphology and function.
This was used earlier for the isolation of some viruses, which appear to show affinity for certain
tissue organs. For example, coronavirus, a respiratory pathogen, was isolated in the tracheal ring
organ culture.
Nowadays, organ culture is not used.
2. Explant Culture
In this method, components of minced tissue are grown as explants embedded in plasma clots.
Earlier, adenoid tissue explant cultures were used for isolation of adenoviruses. This method is
now seldom used in virology.
3. Cell Culture:
1.Cytopathic effect: