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Journal of Clinical Microbiology logoLink to Journal of Clinical Microbiology
. 1984 Feb;19(2):210–212. doi: 10.1128/jcm.19.2.210-212.1984

Cultivation and subgroup determination of human rotaviruses from Egyptian infants and young children.

T Naguib, R G Wyatt, M S Mohieldin, A M Zaki, I Z Imam, H L DuPont
PMCID: PMC271021  PMID: 6321546

Abstract

Primary African green monkey kidney cells were more sensitive than primary cynomolgus monkey kidney and MA104 cells for supporting the growth of human rotaviruses detected in diarrheal stools of Egyptian infants and young children. In attempts to characterize these Egyptian rotaviruses, only 31% of the strains tested in the form of fecal suspensions were identified as subgroup 1 or 2. After one passage in African green monkey kidney cells, 80% of the strains were identified as subgroup 1 or 2. Of these 43 rotaviruses for which the subgroup was determined, 28% were subgroup 1 and 72% were subgroup 2. Thus, cultivation in African green monkey kidney cell cultures facilitated the antigenic characterization of rotaviruses by subgrouping; cultivation also represents an initial step in determining serotype and in developing potential vaccine candidates.

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Selected References

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

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