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During the synthesis of viral components within an infected
cell, the cell undergoes characteristic biochemical and
morphological changes. Visible morphological changes in cells
caused by viral infection are called cytopathic effects (CPE);
the responsible virus is said to be cytopathogenic. The degree
and types of visible damage to cells caused by viral infection
vary greatly. Some viruses cause little or no CPE; others can
cause total destruction of a cell monolayer after infection.
The microscopic appearance of the CPE caused by some of these
cytocidal viruses may be sufficiently characteristic to allow
provisional identification of an unknown virus.
Recognizing CPE is an important diagnostic tool. Several
types of CPE are distinguishable in living cultures, but
fixation and staining of the cells is necessary to view
manifestations such as inclusion bodies and syncytia. Syncytia
are enlarged cells with four or more nuclei resulting from the
fusion of the plasma membranes of four or more cells.
Inclusion bodies are areas of altered staining due to
accumulation of viral nucleic acids or proteins during viral
assembly or due to the viral scarring of the cell.
Figure 1 shows Giemsa-stained bovine fetal spleen cells 96
hours post infection with bovine respiratory syncytial virus,
at a total magnification of 200x. CPE, including inclusion
bodies can be seen. In the magnified, labeled version of the
micrograph, arrows point to faint cytoplasmic inclusion bodies
that appear as bluish areas surrounded by halos in the
cytoplasm. These cells also show CPE in the form of syncytia
also indicated by arrows.
Figure 2 shows noninfected BFS cells at 200X. |