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THE EFFECTS OF ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION EXPOSURE OF ADJACENT CELLS ON PLAQUE FORMATION WITH Herpes simplex VIRUS TYPE I
Authors:Rebecca E  Conner Michael A  Babich Thomas P  Coohill
Institution:Departments of Physics and Astronomy, and Biology, Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, KY 42101;Laboratory of Molecular Carcinogenesis, NCI-NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA
Abstract:African green monkey kidney cells (CV-1P) were exposed to low fluences of 254 nm germicidal radiation and then infected with Herpes simplex virus, type I. The result of this treatment was an increase in viral plaque development rate, the large plaque effect (LPE). A measurement of the kinetics of plaque development suggested that a large portion of the effect could be due to events occurring in those cells that are adjacent to the initially infected cell. An infectious center assay was employed in order to isolate the effects of ultraviolet radiation (UV) on the initially infected cells from those effects on the adjacent cells that became infected as the plaque spread radially outward. Plaque development began earlier in UV irradiated cells and progressed at a uniformly accelerated rate compared to untreated cells. Results indicate that although the initially infected cell contributes to the LPE, the major effect is due to events that occur in the adjacent cells. Each round of viral replication appears to contribute equally to the LPE. The virally induced rate of fusion of the initially infected cell with its immediate neighbors is not affected by UV.
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