1. IN VITRO EFFECTS OF RUBELLA VIRUS, STRAIN RA 27/3, ON HUMAN LYMPHOCYTES
- Author
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Rolf Maller and Lars Sörén
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Lymphocyte ,Stimulation ,In Vitro Techniques ,Antibodies, Viral ,Lymphocyte Activation ,medicine.disease_cause ,Rubella ,Virus ,Immune system ,medicine ,Humans ,Lymphocytes ,Cells, Cultured ,Hemagglutination, Viral ,Phytohaemagglutinin ,biology ,Chemistry ,Rubella virus ,General Medicine ,Hemagglutination Inhibition Tests ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Female ,Antibody - Abstract
The inhibiting effect of rubella virus on lymphocyte stimulation in vitro was studied, using purified virus of the attenuated strain RA 27/3. Addition of the virus to human lymphocytes from twenty healthy blood donors before stimulation with leuco-agglutinin (LA), a component of phytohaemagglutinin, caused a considerable inhibition of the LA response in some experiments, whereas in other experiments the inhibition was slight or non-existent. If further analysed, the results showed a correlation between the degree of inhibition and the immunity of the lymphocyte donor against rubella, as measured by haemagglutination inhibition (HI). Thus the LA-response was significantly more depressed in a group of lymphocyte donors with HI-titres ranging from 20 to 160 than in another group with HI-titre less than 5. Possible explanations of the virus-induced inhibition of the LA response and possible connection between this phenomenon and the immune response against rubella are discussed.
- Published
- 2009
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