Introduction to methods in virology
Virus purification, and Virus isolation
Virus identification techniques
Cultivation of viruses
•This refers to the propagation or growing of a virus for research purposes.
2 major techniques:
Virus cell culture
•Cells for the culture of viruses are provided based on the host type
Requirements for animal cell culture
continuous cell lines
Requirements for animal cell culture
media
Requirements for animal cell culture
growth vessel
3.Growth vessel: A virus can be cultivated in immortalized cells in glass or plastic flask or plates where the cells bathed or suspended in the growth medium.
Cells forming monolayer: cells growing in a single layer on a growth vessel.
Cells in suspension: Need to be stirred to keep them in suspension
Requirements for animal cell culture
antibiotic
Requirements for animal cell culture
sterile cabinet
Requirements for animal cell culture
incubator
summary of virus isolation techniques
Virus isolation techniques
clone
f a plague is assumed to be from a single virus, it is referred to as a clone (genetically identical)
Virus isolation techniques
isolate
arises from a clone that is genetically identical
Virus isolation techniques
strain
an isolate different form the parent isolate is regarded as a strain
Virus isolation techniques
purified plaque
are genetically pure virus strain derived from the re-culturing of a plaque derived from monolayers of the 2 or more virions
Virus isolation techniques
passaging
a term used for each virus sub-culture process
Virus isolation techniques
virus efficiency
viruses replicate more efficiently after repeated subculture
Virus isolation techniques
laboratory strain
occurs when an isolated virus strain has undergone numerous replication cycles in the lab and is now quite different genetically from the wild type of virus
Centrifugation
•Centrifugation employs rotational gravitational force to separate particles in a solution by density.•The process separates virus strain from host cell debris and other contaminants to obtain a pure concentrate for various experimental purpose
Differential centrifugation
involves alternating cycles of low and high speed resulting in partial purification of the virus
density gradient centrifugation
involves the centrifugation of viral particles in a solution of increasing concentration which separates each particle by density
this results in a more purified form of the virus
•Sucrose is commonly used as a solute due to its high solubility.•
Two types of density gradient centrifugation are:
i. Rate zonal Density gradient centrifugation
ii. equilibrium density gradient centrifugation
.
Techniques used in structural investigation of viruses
light microscopy
more are not efficient in virus identification due to their low resolution power compared to the minute size of a virus
Techniques used in structural investigation of viruses
confocal microscope
is a more sensitive type of light microscope used in virus investigation to study cytopathic effects
Generally, it employs the use of a laser to scan the virus particle, producing excellent images of thick specimens and fluorescing specimens.It can be used to investigate live viral cells or transfer of proteins from a virus or host cell which are tagged with appropriate fluorescence labels. E.g. green fluorescence protein from a jelly fish protein.Images of specimens arising from confocal microscopy can be represented in 3-D