Human coronaviruses were discovered in the 1960s. They were isolated using two different methods in the United Kingdom and the United States. E.C. Kendall, Malcom Byone, and David Tyrrell working at the Common Cold Unit of the British Medical Research Council in 1960 isolated from a boy a novel common cold virus B814. The virus was not able to be cultivated using standard techniques which had successfully cultivated rhinoviruses, adenoviruses and other known common cold viruses. In 1965, Tyrrell and Byone successfully cultivated the novel virus by serially passing it through organ culture of human embryonic trachea. The new cultivating method was introduced to the lab by Bertil Hoorn. The isolated virus when intranasally inoculated into volunteers caused a cold and was inactivated by ether which indicated it had a lipid envelope. Around the same time, Dorothy Hamre and John Procknow at the University of Chicago isolated a novel cold virus 229E from medical students, which they grew in kidney tissue culture. The novel virus 229E, like the virus strain B814, when inoculated into volunteers caused a cold and was inactivated by ether.
GUJARAT RAJYA MA EK VISTAT MATHI BIJA VISTAR MA JAVA MATE MANJURI AAPVA ANGE NI MARGDARSHAK SUCHANAO
GUJARAT RAJYA MA EK VISTAT MATHI BIJA VISTAR MA JAVA MATE MANJURI AAPVA ANGE NI MARGDARSHAK SUCHANAO
AA SUCHANAO GUJARAT RAJYA NI ANDAR NA AVARJAVAR MATE MANYA REHSHE
GUJARAT RAJYA MA EK VISTAT MATHI BIJA VISTAR MA JAVA MATE MANJURI AAPVA ANGE NI MARGDARSHAK SUCHANAO
AA SUCHANAO GUJARAT RAJYA NI ANDAR NA AVARJAVAR MATE MANYA REHSHE