Interspecies trasmission of equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) from horse to cattle was shown by Crandell et al. (1988). Specific mutations related to the transmission were studied by comparison of five EHV-1 isolates in cattle (BH1247, 3M20-3, G118, G1753, and 9BSV4) using polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis with added sequencing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe immunotherapeutic effect of low-dose human alpha interferon on viral shedding and clinical disease was evaluated in horses inoculated with equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1). Eighteen clinically healthy weanling horses, 5 to 7 months old, were allotted to 3 equal groups. Two groups were treated orally with human alpha-2a interferon (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA drug induced equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) mutant lacking thymidine kinase inducing activity was developed and evaluated as a vaccine. The safety and effectiveness of the vaccine to protect against experimentally induced EHV-1 respiratory disease were evaluated in weanling horses free of EHV-1 neutralizing antibody. The vaccine was safe when administered either intramuscularly or intravenously, and EHV-1 was not shed intranasally during the 12 days following administration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn outbreak of congenital abnormalities occurred in sheep at San Angelo, Texas, between December 1986 and February 1987. Of 360 lambs born, 19.2% had arthrogryposis or other musculo-skeletal problems and hydranencephaly (AGH), and the total neonatal loss was 25.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour pregnant mares were inoculated intranasally and/or intravenously with equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1), subtype 1 during the third trimester of gestation. One mare aborted on postinfection day 15, one mare delivered a sick, weak full term foal, and two mares delivered healthy, full term foals. EHV-1, subtype 1 was isolated from several tissues of the aborted fetus and from the thymus of the sick foal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRemoval of the pineal, or denervation of this gland by superior cervical ganglionectomy, blocks testicular regression in golden hamsters exposed to short photoperiods. Aspiration of the olfactory bulbs or lesions of the suprachiasmatic or paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus (SCNx or PVNx) have similar effects. We have examined the effects of these operations on pineal melatonin content and gonadal responses to various patterns of exogenous melatonin in order to examine the roles played by the olfactory bulbs, the SCN, and the PVN in hamster photoperiodism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn epizootic of abortions, weak lambs, stillbirths, and congenital arthrogryposis-hydranencephaly occurred in a sheep flock in West Texas. The outbreak began during the first week of January 1987 and continued through the third week of February 1987. Lambs born after February 1987 were not affected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeoxyribonucleic acid fingerprinting analyses with 4 restriction endonucleases (EcoRI, BamHI, BglII, and HindIII) and serotest results have definitively indicated that 5 herpesviruses isolated from 1974 to 1986 from aborted bovine fetuses and from bovine tissues and nasal secretions were abortigenic subtypes of equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1). The herpesviruses, designated BH1247, 3M20-3, G118, H1753, and 9BSV4, were neutralized by EHV-1-specific antiserum and could be propagated in cultures of either bovine or equine cells. Only minor differences in restriction endonuclease patterns were detected from the pattern of an Army 183 isolate of EHV-1 subtype 1 that had been passaged only in equine cells and from that of an attenuated EHV-1 subtype 1 (RQ) strain that had been passaged several hundred times in non-equine cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo virus isolates, one from lesions of the vagina of a Bearded Collie and the other from the penis and prepuce of a Black Labrador, were partially characterized. The two viruses possessed the physicochemical properties, size and morphology of viruses belonging to the family Caliciviridae. The two isolates were shown by cross neutralization tests to be distinct from previously reported canine and feline caliciviruses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfectious bovine rhinotracheitis (IBR) virus was isolated from the trigeminal ganglion of a feral pig after dexamethasone treatment. Three pigs inoculated intranasally with the IBR virus did not respond clinically or serologically. The virus was re-isolated from tonsillar swabs from two animals on Post-Infection Day (PID) 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo strains of the same virus (isolates AR 168 and 7856), were isolated in 1981 from an apparently healthy cow and a sick sheep in TX, U.S.A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe bovine herpesvirus type 4 (BHV-4) group has a slow replication cycle, a narrow host range, and cytopathogenic effects characteristic of cytomegaloviruses (CMV), but a Group B genome structure similar to that of lymphotropic Herpesvirus saimiri (HVS). Reference BHV-4 strain DN599 and BHV-4 strains N124 and FHV-2 induced in the cytosol fraction of thymidine kinase-negative (TK-) rabbit skin (RAB-BU) cell mutants a novel TK activity. The BHV-4-induced thymidine kinase (TK) differed from the principal cytosol TK of mock-infected cells in PAGE mobility (Rm) under non-denaturing conditions and in the capacity to efficiently substitute CTP for ATP as a phosphate donor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Vet Med Assoc
September 1985
The virus causing equine coital exanthema (equine herpesvirus 3) was isolated from a lesion on the nostril of a 2-month-old foal. One week after the mare had returned from a stallion station, vesicular lesions developed on her vulva. They were diagnosed clinically as coital exanthema, and 5 days later a lesion developed on the nostril of her foal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPseudorabies virus (PRV) was not transmitted horizontally from 3 PRV-infected calves to 2 contact control calves during 4 days of comingling in experiment 1. Although these contact control calves developed clinical signs of pseudorabies when infected intranasally with PRV in experiment 2, they did not transmit PRV to a second pair of contact control calves. However, 1 of 2 pigs comingled with these 4 calves seroconverted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRes Commun Chem Pathol Pharmacol
February 1982
Vaccines against infectious bovine rhinotracheitis (IBR), bovine viral diarrhea (BVD), bovine parainfluenza-3 (PI-3), and bacterin against Pasteurella hemolytica and P. multocida were studied to determine their effectiveness when given 30 days before weaning in preventing respiratory disease in beef calves after weaning. A total of 310 calves, 6 to 8 months old, were divided into 3 groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPseudorabies was diagnosed in a 5-year-old female crossbred dog by histologic examination and virus isolation. The clinical signs were depression, salivation, head pressing, and emesis. There were no gross pathologic findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA latent pseudorabies virus infection was established in pigs despite vaccination with a modified-live pseudorabies virus vaccine. Although the vaccinated pigs developed high concentrations of antibody, virus was recovered from the tonsils and lungs of pigs treated with dexamethasone three months after inoculation with virulent virus. These results may explain why vaccination programs have failed to eliminate the persistence and spread of virulent pseudorabies virus in infected herds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBovine herpesvirus 1247 (one dose) was given subcutaneously to five pregnant pony mares between 227 and 319 days of their gestations. There were no adverse clinical reactions, and the virus was not recovered from nasal swabs collected during a 2-week period after vaccination. Four ponies foaled full-term, live, healthy foals.
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