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The Journal of Experimental Medicine logoLink to The Journal of Experimental Medicine
. 1969 Oct 31;130(5):955–961. doi: 10.1084/jem.130.5.955

LASTING BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF EARLY ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES

IV. NOTES ON THE PHYSICOCHEMICAL AND IMMUNOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF AN ENTEROVIRUS THAT DEPRESSES THE GROWTH OF MICE

Chi-Jen Lee 1, Rene Dubos 1
PMCID: PMC2180485  PMID: 4310504

Abstract

Physicochemical and immunological techniques have been used in an attempt to characterize a filterable agent, separated from the intestines of mice raised under ordinary conditions of husbandry, which produces a lasting depression of weight in specific pathogen-free (SPF) mice when administered to them orally shortly after birth. Although this agent has not yet been identified, it will be tentatively designated here as enterovirus. The mouse enterovirus can be readily sedimented by ultracentrifugation and by precipitation at pH 4.3; it does not pass through cellophane membranes. Its infective power is completely destroyed by ultraviolet radiation, but is resistant to heating at 56°C, exposure to ether, treatment with trypsin, ribonuclease, and deoxyribonuclease. Dialysis and treatment with ether and nucleases greatly increase the infective activity of the intestinal filtrates containing the enterovirus, a finding which suggests that these procedures eliminate or destroy some inhibitory substance(s). The mouse enterovirus causes hemagglutination of mouse red blood cells. When injected into rabbits, it elicits in them an immune response that renders their serum capable of neutralizing its weight-depressing activity. As measured by inhibition of hemagglutination or complement fixation, the sera of infected mice do not exhibit any significant activity against usual mouse viruses. Centrifugation of the mouse enterovirus in 50%–20% sucrose gradient gave almost complete recovery of the infectivity and of hemagglutinating activity in the same fraction. In contrast, the protein content of the material was distributed through the various fractions. Consequently, this procedure resulted in a marked increase of specific activity.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

  1. Lee C. J., Dubos R. Lasting biological effects of early environmental influence. 3. Metabolic responses of mice to neonatal infection with a filterable weight-depressing agent. J Exp Med. 1968 Oct 1;128(4):753–762. doi: 10.1084/jem.128.4.753. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
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