A simple immunofluorescent technique for the detection of human rotavirus
β Scribed by R. B. Moosai; P. S. Gardner; J. D. Almeida; M. A. Greenaway
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 380 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0146-6615
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
If trypsin is incorporated in the tissue culture medium it is possible to carry out a sensitive immunofluorescence assay for the presence of human rotavirus. The enhanced effect of trypsin is negated by serum. It has also been established that naturally occurring enzymes in faeces enable some virus to penetrate tissue culture cells. The role of these naturally occurring enzymes in the pathogenesis of rotavirus infection is discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Three types of microbead calibrators available for quantitative fluorescence flow cytometry have been studied in parallel using a variety of monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs). The QIFI kit is designed for indirect immunofluorescence (IF), and both the Quantum Simply Cellular (QSC) assay and the Quanti-B
A method for preparing multiple sucrose gradients by quickly freezing layers of sucrose has been developed. These gradients may be stored in the freezer indefinitely, and thawed from 8 to 24 h at 4Β°C before use. The middle region of the resulting sucrose gradients was linear. Thawing time and centri
IDSO, S. B., 1971 . A simple technique for the calibration of long-wave radiation probes. Agr. Meteorol.,. A simple technique for the long-wave calibration of net and one-way radiation probes is described. The materials required for the operation are inexpensive and easily assembled. An error anal
A rapid and inexpensive assay for dye-binding proteins has been developed. It depends on the separation of free and protein-bound sulfobromophthalein in I-ml columns of Sephadex G-25 due to differential adsorption of the dye to the protein and to the Sephadex. With bovine serum albumin the calibrati