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JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute logoLink to JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute
. 1976 Sep 1;57(3):585–590. doi: 10.1093/jnci/57.3.585

Type C Virus Expression in Lymphoma-Paralysis-Prone Wild Mice2

Murray B Gardner 1, Vaclav Klement 2, Robert R Rongey 1, Patricia McConahey 3, John D Estes 1, Robert J Huebner 4,7
PMCID: PMC7204403  PMID: 185401

Abstract

Wild mice trapped near Lake Casitas (LC) in southern California showed a high prevalence of infectious type C virus in the liver, spleen, and thymus within the first few weeks of life. By young adulthood about 80% of LC mice (including their genital tissues) were infected. Virus isolates from these mice cause lymphoma and lower limb paralysis under both natural and experimental conditions. Mice destined to develop paralysis showed higher levels of serum gs antigen early in life, whereas mice destined to develop lymphoma or remain free of these diseases could not be distinguished by this test. The individual variation in virus expression suggested that differences in virus type or in the immune or other host defense mechanisms greatly influenced susceptibility or resistance to indigenous type C virus-caused disease in LC wild mice.

Footnotes

2

Supported by Public Health Service contract N01 CP53500 within the Virus-Cancer Program of the National Cancer Institute.


Articles from JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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