Pinctada birnavirus (PiBV) is the causative agent of summer atrophy in pearl oyster ( (Gould)). The disease, which induces mass mortality in juveniles less than 1 year old and abnormalities in adults, was first reported in Japan in 2019. Research on the disease has been hindered by the lack of cell lines capable of propagating PiBV. We established an ex vivo method for PiBV propagation using mantle tissue, the primary infection site of the virus. The method was used to investigate the proliferation characteristics of the virus at different culture temperatures and the sensitivity of the virus to UV radiation. The marginal zone of the mantle was found to be the most suitable for PiBV replication in terms of both viral yield and reproducibility. PiBV showed optimal propagation at an incubation temperature of 25 °C, with minimal to no increase at 15 °C or 32.5 °C. Using the tissue culture infectious dose 50 (TCID) measurement system developed in this study, we found that PiBV propagation was no longer detectable after UV irradiation at 6150 J/m or higher. The tissue fragment culture method developed in this study is expected to facilitate both ex vivo experiments and PiBV research.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens14010076 | DOI Listing |
Pathogens
January 2025
Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, Pathology Division, Aquaculture Research Department, Fisheries Technology Institute, Minami-Ise 516-0193, Mie, Japan.
Pinctada birnavirus (PiBV) is the causative agent of summer atrophy in pearl oyster ( (Gould)). The disease, which induces mass mortality in juveniles less than 1 year old and abnormalities in adults, was first reported in Japan in 2019. Research on the disease has been hindered by the lack of cell lines capable of propagating PiBV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Akoya pearl oyster ( (Gould)) is the most important species for pearl cultivation in Japan. Mass mortality of 0-year-old juvenile oysters and anomalies in adults, known as summer atrophy, have been observed in major pearl farming areas during the season when seawater temperatures exceed about 20 °C since 2019. In this study, we identified a novel birnavirus as the pathogen of summer atrophy and named it birnavirus (PiBV).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDis Aquat Organ
July 2002
Center for Marine Environmental Studies, Ehime University, Matsuyama, Japan.
This study examines the seasonal changes of marine birnavirus (MABV) in seawater and the Japanese pearl oyster Pinctada fucata reared at different depths (2 and 15 m). Oysters and seawater were collected in 1998, and a 2-step PCR was carried out to detect MABV. Virus isolation was performed on the PCR-positive samples in the oyster.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Virol
December 2000
Department of Aquaculture, Kochi University, Japan.
This study examines the seasonal occurrence and infective state of marine birnavirus (MABV) in cultured Japanese pearl oyster (Pinctada fucata). Planted oysters were sampled monthly in 1997 and 1998. To detect MABV in the oysters, PCR and virus isolation were carried out.
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