Preparations of the Rothamsted culture of tobacco necrosis virus always gave two and usually three zones when centrifuged in sucrose density gradients. The top zone consisted of polyhedral particles with a sedimentation constant of 50 S, the middle zone of larger polyhedral particles with 116 S, and the bottom zone when present, consisted of the 50S particles aggregated in groups of 12. Neither the small particles (50 S) nor their aggregates were infective when inoculated either to tobacco or French bean plants, but they became so when inoculated together with the large particles (116 S). The small and large particles are serologically unrelated and seem to be different viruses, one of which depends on the other for some process that allows...
Soil-borne viruses of the tobacco-rattle type occur in sandy and peaty soils in many parts of Scotla...
BLACK et al. (1948) have published electron micrographs of bodies believed to represent the New York...
Two kinds of assay, particle counts by electron microscopy and infectivity for leaves ofPhaseolus vu...
Tobacco necrosis is a disease that can be caused by several serologically unrelated viruses, all of ...
SUMMARY: Preparations of the Rothamsted tobacco necrosis virus were made by the ultracentrifugation ...
When extracts from plants infected with various strains of tobacco mosaic virus were ultracentrifuge...
SUMMARY: Studies of the products obtained when tobacco Mosaic virus (TMV) is disrupted with alkali o...
SUMMARY: Purified preparations of the Rothamsted tobacco necrosis virus made by sedimenting the viru...
SUMMARY: Preparations of the Rothamsted tobacco necrosis virus made from tobacco leaves that have be...
SUMMARY: Preparations of the Rothamsted tobacco necrosis virus were made by the ultracentrifugation ...
SUMMARY: Tobacco rattle virus was isolated from tobacco sap by differential centrifugation; the yiel...
Strains of tobacco necrosis virus (TNV) differed in their behaviour when inoculated to French bean l...
The infectivity of nucleic acid preparations made by disrupting tobacco mosaic virus with phenol was...
Publication authorized June 22, 1938.Includes bibliographical references (pages 17-18)
Isolates from seven virus stocks called tobacco necrosis were serologically related, but fell into t...
Soil-borne viruses of the tobacco-rattle type occur in sandy and peaty soils in many parts of Scotla...
BLACK et al. (1948) have published electron micrographs of bodies believed to represent the New York...
Two kinds of assay, particle counts by electron microscopy and infectivity for leaves ofPhaseolus vu...
Tobacco necrosis is a disease that can be caused by several serologically unrelated viruses, all of ...
SUMMARY: Preparations of the Rothamsted tobacco necrosis virus were made by the ultracentrifugation ...
When extracts from plants infected with various strains of tobacco mosaic virus were ultracentrifuge...
SUMMARY: Studies of the products obtained when tobacco Mosaic virus (TMV) is disrupted with alkali o...
SUMMARY: Purified preparations of the Rothamsted tobacco necrosis virus made by sedimenting the viru...
SUMMARY: Preparations of the Rothamsted tobacco necrosis virus made from tobacco leaves that have be...
SUMMARY: Preparations of the Rothamsted tobacco necrosis virus were made by the ultracentrifugation ...
SUMMARY: Tobacco rattle virus was isolated from tobacco sap by differential centrifugation; the yiel...
Strains of tobacco necrosis virus (TNV) differed in their behaviour when inoculated to French bean l...
The infectivity of nucleic acid preparations made by disrupting tobacco mosaic virus with phenol was...
Publication authorized June 22, 1938.Includes bibliographical references (pages 17-18)
Isolates from seven virus stocks called tobacco necrosis were serologically related, but fell into t...
Soil-borne viruses of the tobacco-rattle type occur in sandy and peaty soils in many parts of Scotla...
BLACK et al. (1948) have published electron micrographs of bodies believed to represent the New York...
Two kinds of assay, particle counts by electron microscopy and infectivity for leaves ofPhaseolus vu...