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      Experimental demyelination produced by the A59 strain of mouse hepatitis virus.

      Neurology
      Animals, Antibodies, Viral, analysis, Antigens, Viral, Demyelinating Diseases, immunology, microbiology, pathology, Hepatitis, Viral, Animal, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Murine hepatitis virus, Spinal Cord

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          Abstract

          Intracerebral inoculation of 4- to 6-week-old C57BL/6 mice with the A59 strain of mouse hepatitis virus (MHV), a murine coronavirus, produced biphasic disease. Acute hepatitis and mild meningoencephalitis were followed by subacute spastic paralysis with demyelinating lesions in the brain and spinal cord as determined by Epon-embedded toluidine-blue-stained sections and by electronmicroscopy. MHV-A59 was cultured by plaque assay from the blood, brain, spinal cord, and liver of infected mice during the acute phase, but not in the chronic stage. MHV-A59 antigen was detected by immunofluorescence (IF) until 3 months postinfection (PI). Serum anti-MHV-A59 antibodies were detected from 7 days to 5 months PI. The induction of demyelination by MHV-A59 provides a suitable system to study virus-induced demyelination further.

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