Concepedia

Concept

Virology

Parents

290.4K

Publications

17M

Citations

611.2K

Authors

26.9K

Institutions

Plaque-based Molecular Virology

1931 - 1960

During 1931–1960, virology coalesced around quantitative measurement, plaque-based isolation, and early molecular investigations. Plaque assays became the central paradigm for quantifying infectivity and obtaining pure viral lines in cultured cells. Red cell agglutination methods expanded quantitative virology for measuring viral titers and antibody levels, while cell culture systems and studies of virus–host interactions established essential platforms for growth kinetics and replication.

Plaque-based methods emerged as the core experimental paradigm for quantifying infectivity, isolating pure viral lines, and studying virus–host interactions in cell cultures, as shown across poliovirus, bacteriophage, and adenovirus studies [1], [4], [5], [12], [13].

Quantitative virology via red cell agglutination became a standard for measuring influenza virus and antibody levels, with foundational methods and refinements in the 1940s [2], [6], [11].

Early molecular virology pursued dissection of viral components, distinguishing roles of nucleic acid and proteins and pursuing macromolecular characterization [3], [7], [9], [19], [20].

Cell culture systems and virus–host interaction studies provided essential platforms for virology, including plaque-based experiments on monkey kidney cells and HeLa models [4], [5], [13], [14], [17].

Investigations into growth kinetics, replication rates, and quantitative relations between virus and host underpin foundational virology knowledge [6], [12], [16].

Entry-Centric Retrovirology

1961 - 1988

Viral Genomics and Immunity

1989 - 1995

Chemokine Receptor CCR5 Entry

1996 - 2002

SARS-era Genomic Immunity Framework

2003 - 2009

Cross-Viral Structural Immunology

2010 - 2016

SARS-CoV-2 Genomic Diagnostics Era

2017 - 2023