• 1 January 1977
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 38 (11), 1705-1708
Abstract
Cultures of macrophages initiated from peripheral blood monocytes and organ cultures of trachael rings were tested for their susceptibility to bovine viruses. With several notable exceptions, viruses cytopathogenic for bovine embryonic lung cultures were cytopathogenic for macrophages. Although cowpox virus replicated in macrophages, pseudocowpox did not and although pseudorabies virus replicated within macrophages, infectious bovine rhinotracheitis and DN-599 herpesviruses did not. Bluetongue virus established an interesting relationship with macrophages. Whereas bluetongue virus was initially cytopathogenic for macrophages, it lost its cytopathogenicity on repeated passage, although it was capable of continued replication in macrophages. When subsequently passaged onto bovine embryonic lung cultures, it regained its cytopathogenicity. Parainfluenza-3, bovine viral diarrhea and infectious bovine rhinotracheitis viruses readily destroyed ciliary activity in tracheal-ring cultures, as contrasted with the inability of bovine respiratory syncytial virus to destroy ciliary activity, even though bovine respiratory syncytial virus was able to replicate within ciliated epithelial cells of tracheal rings.