SUMMARYCultures of starch-elicited peritoneal mouse macrophages in medium containing macrophage growth factor (MGF) were infected with lactate dehydrogenaseelevating virus (LDV) and, after various times in culture, LDV production was monitored as a function of time by infectivity titrations in mice, by measuring [3H]uridine incorporation into LDV RNA and extracellular LDV, by autoradiographic analysis of the proportion of productively infected cells and by electron microscopy. Regardless of the age of the cultures when infected with LDV, only a small proportion of the macrophages (generally between 3 and 20% of the total) became productively infected after a primary infection; maximum virus RNA synthesis and virus production occurred during the first 24 h after infection and then decreased precipitously. Productively infected macrophages could be readily recognized in electron micrographs of 24-h infected macrophage cultures and in sections of spleens from 24-h infected mice by characteristic morphological alterations. These consisted of formation of clusters of double-membrane vesicles with a diameter of 100 to 300 ~m, budding of nucleocapsids into vesicles with single membranes and accumulation of mature virions in these vesicles. One to 4 days later, however, such cells were no longer found in infected cultures or spleens of infected mice and superinfection did not restimulate LDV replication. Cultures established with macrophages from 1-day LDV-infected mice also did not support LDV replication. We conclude that LDV replication in cultures or mice is limited to a single cycle in a subpopulation of macrophages and that infection leads to cell death and rapid phagocytosis of the dead cells by the resistant, uninfected macrophages.
Spherical forms of Leptospira interrogans serotype canicola Hond Utrecht IV were induced with 1 M NaCl. Electron micrographs of these salt-altered cells (SAC) revealed that the outer envelope or sheath had pulled away from the protoplasmic cylinder. Treatment of SAC with 0.02%7; sodium lauryl sulfate solubilized the sheath and released the protoplasmic cylinder. Further processing of the solubilized sheath yielded a pellet which displayed a membrane structure in electron micrographs. The released protoplasmic cylinder showed loss of intracellular organization and the outer envelope present in normal cells. Immunization of hamsters with whole formalized cells, SAC, or sheath in doses as low as 10 ,ug,'animal
Streptomyces venezuelae is a filamentous bacterium with branching vegetative hyphae embedded in the substrate and aerial hyphae bearing spores. The exterior of the spore is inlaid with myriads of tiny rods which can be removed with xylene. The spore wall is approximately 30 nanometers thick. Occasionally, it can be seen that the plasma membrane and the membranous bodies within a spore are connected. The spore's germ plasm is not separated from the cytoplasm by a nuclear envelope. The cell walls of the vegetative hyphae, which are about 15 nanometers thick, are structurally and chemically similar to those of gram-positive bacteria. The numerous internal membranous bodies, some of which arise from the plasma membrane of the vegetative hypha, may be vesicular, whirled, or convoluted. Membranous bodies are usually prominent at the hyphal apices and are associated with septum formation. The germ plasm is an elongate, contorted, centrally placed area of lower electron density than the hyphal cytoplasm. The spores differ from the vegetative hyphae, not only in fine structure, but also in the arginine and leucine contents of their total cellular proteins.
Ultrastructural examination of primary and subcultured epithelial cells established in vitro from an abdominal metastasis of a human testicular tumor revealed particles with the morphology of retroviruses. These structures, found only after extensive scanning of the cells, were observed budding from microvilli and from the outer cell membrane and as extracellular particles. Production of these virus particles was stimulated by the incubation of cells in culture medium containing 5-iodo-2'-deoxyuridine and dexamethasone.
Exposure of the avirulent Kazan 5 treponeme to low concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate (1.4 m
m
) results in the solubilization of the outer envelope. Maximal reaggregation of the outer envelope preparation requires cations, and cation concentration affects both the yield and structure of the aggregates. The reaggregated outer envelope preparation can be resolubilized with the chelating agent, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, or with sodium dodecyl sulfate.
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