کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5800050 | 1555354 | 2015 | 6 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Sunshine virus is a paramyxovirus that infects snakes.
- The virus was detected by PCR in a dam and a sire, both carpet pythons.
- The dam then laid a clutch of 21 apparently healthy eggs, 14 eggs hatched.
- Virus was found in the allantois, amnion and embryo from multiple eggs in the clutch.
- No virus was detected in oral-cloacal swabs from the hatchlings of this clutch.
Sunshine virus is a paramyxovirus of pythons associated with neurorespiratory disease and mortalities. This report provides evidence for its vertical transmission. In a collection of over 200 Australian pythons, a dam and a sire, both carpet pythons (Morelia spilota), were PCR-positive for Sunshine virus at a time when the dam was likely to have been gravid. A clutch of 21 eggs was laid and three non-viable eggs were tested for the presence of Sunshine virus by PCR. One egg had been incubating for 34 days while the other two had been incubating for 49 days. The surface of all three eggs was negative for Sunshine virus but swabs of the allantois and amnion were positive in all three eggs. Embryo tissue samples were tested from the two 49 day old eggs. From one embryo, a sample of brain and a pooled sample of lung, liver, kidney and intestine were positive, while for the other embryo, a pooled sample of lung, liver, kidney, intestine and brain was positive. Fourteen of the 21 eggs hatched and all hatchlings were tested by PCR at least once between the ages of 53 and 229 days old. All hatchlings were PCR-negative for Sunshine virus.
Journal: Veterinary Microbiology - Volume 175, Issues 2â4, 25 February 2015, Pages 179-184