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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Induction of Partial Specific Heterotypic Immunity in Mice by a Single Infection with Influenza A Virus

Jerome L. Schulman, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1965 - 
- Vol. 89, Iss: 1, pp 170-174
TLDR
Mice infected 4 weeks previously with influenza A virus were found to be partially immune when challenged with influenzaA2 virus, and an accelerated rise of hemagglutinating-inhibiting antibody after A2 virus challenge was demonstrated in animals previously infected with flu A virus.
Abstract
Schulman, Jerome L. (Cornell University Medical College, New York, N.Y.), and Edwin D. Kilbourne. Induction of partial specific heterotypic immunity in mice by a single infection with influenza A virus. J. Bacteriol. 89:170-174. 1965.-Mice infected 4 weeks previously with influenza A virus were found to be partially immune when challenged with influenza A2 virus. This partial immunity was demonstrated by reduced titers of pulmonary virus, decreased mortality, and less extensive lung lesions. A specific immunological basis for this protection was suggested by the absence of any protection in animals previously infected with influenza B virus when challenged with A2 virus, or in animals previously infected with influenza A virus when challenged with influenza B virus. Parenteral inoculation with inactivated influenza A virus did not induce partial immunity to A2 virus challenge. An accelerated rise of hemagglutinating-inhibiting antibody after A2 virus challenge was demonstrated in animals previously infected with influenza A virus.

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References
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A virus obtained from influenza patients

TL;DR: It is always worthy of trial in ansemias which fail to respond to other treatment, especially in patients who have been frequently transfused, and direct matching of the blood is essential.
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Epidemiologic and immunologic significance of age distribution of antibody to antigenic variants of influenza virus.

TL;DR: The present data clearly demonstrate that in the early years of life the range of the antibody spectrum is narrow, and that it becomes progressively broader in later life.
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Experimental transmission of influenza virus infection in mice i. the period of transmissibility

TL;DR: Evidence has been presented that with the experimental model described, infected mice vary in their ability to transmit influenza virus infection, which is not explained by differences in titers of influenza virus in the nose, throat, trachea, or lungs of good transmitters.
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Neutralization of epidemic influenza virus : the linear relationship between the quantity of serum and the quantity of virus neutralized.

TL;DR: By means of the linear relationship between virus and antiserum it is possible to determine a fixed, rather than a relative, value for the neutralizing capacity of a serum.
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