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An electron microscope study of molluscum contagiosum*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

Arwyn Charles
Affiliation:
Departments of Dermatology and Biomolecular Structure, The University, Leeds
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The development of the molluscum body and of the molluscum contagiosum virus is described. All cells of the molluscum lesion do not form molluscum bodies, but those which do probably show cytoplasmic abnormality prior to the appearance of virus particles within the cytoplasm. Such abnormal cells may reflect the activity of some infective precursor of the morphologically observable virus particle; they may alternatively represent cells which have successfully resisted invasion by the infective precursor.

Cells which have failed to resist invasion gradually become filled with virus particles and the nucleus becomes eccentric. The molluscum body thus formed is virtually a bag of virus particles, the wall of the bag being the peripheral cytoplasm, which seems to resist invasion and in which the nucleus remnant can readily be detected.

There appear to be two kinds of viruses. Development of the commoner virus is compared and contrasted with studies by Morgan and his colleagues of vaccinia and fowl pox. It is akin to fowl pox in its origin from foci of finely dispersed cytoplasm, here called cytoplasmic clouds; it is akin to vaccinia in that no evidence can be found of a denser, finely granular, pre-nucleoid material; it is like both in that the virus does not observably develop within the nucleus; and it is unlike both in that a nuclear change—the appearance of rather unspecific dense bodies—is seen. The structural changes seen in the virus particles during development are similar to those described by Morgan et al., but a slightly different interpretation is given of the behaviour of the transient ‘nucleoid’: they believe that it expands to form a central viroplasm, whereas in this paper it is believed to disperse through an already present central viroplasm.

The second type of virus is of uncertain origin. It may develop from, or at least it seems to be related to, a double-membrane structure seen in abnormal lesion cells.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1960

References

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