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Highly Purified Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus: Optical and Biological Measurements during Zone Electrophoresis in a Glucose Density Gradient

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1966

Year

Abstract

Highly purified, concentrated foot-and-mouth disease virus, type A, was homogeneous and monodisperse by carrier-free zone electrophoresis in a glucose density gradient. Virus mobilities in veronal-acetate buffer, p H 8.6 and ionic strength 0.1, were identical whether determined by infectivity or optical methods. Low passage calf-kidney virus had a significantly higher mobility, 3.28 × 10 -5 cm 2 /volt · sec, than high passage virus, 2.84 × 10 -5 cm 2 /volt · sec. Single passages of the high passage virus in baby hamster kidney cells did not change its mobility. Regardless of passage history, storage at 4°C in 0.05 M phosphate at p H 7.5 increased mobilities to about 3.75 × 10 -5 cm 2 /volt · sec with retention of infectivity; some virions broke down to protein and ribonucleic acid. These electrophoretically distinct viruses possessed different absorbance-temperature profiles but identical sedimentation constants.