pubmed:abstractText |
Hamsters previously infected with influenza virus A1/FM/1/47 produced serum hemagglutination inhibition (HI) antibody in response to 1/100 the antigenic dose of inactivated influenza virus A2/Hong Kong vaccine necessary to induce antibody in normal animals. This priming effect was believed to be due to the virus infection which caused an immune response to a virus antigen common to both the infecting virus and the virus vaccine; this antigen acted as a carrier for the specific vaccine virus hemagglutinin and potentiated the immune response to the new antigen. This theory, which has been established in other immune systems, was tested, and the results obtained did not contradict the conditions imposed in the above explanation. Thus, the priming effect could be transferred to normal hamsters by inoculation of spleen cells from virus-infected animals, and the HI antibody response to the virus vaccine was characteristic of a secondary response. The theory also required that the new antigen be coupled to the carrier protein; however, primed hamsters produced serum HI antibody after inoculation with ether-Tween-split virus vaccine, but there was no proof that this vaccine was completely dissociated.
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