| Literature DB >> 1318381 |
L J Lowenstine1, N W Lerche, J L Yee, A Uyeda, M B Jennings, R J Munn, H M McClure, D C Anderson, P N Fultz, M B Gardner.
Abstract
A retrospective study determined that an epizootic of immune suppression and lymphoma in stump-tailed macaques (Macaca arctoides) that began in 1976 was associated with a horizontally spread lentivirus infection. This conclusion was based on serology, epidemiology, pathology, and virus isolation. The lesions found in the stump-tailed macaques were more compatible with lesions seen in SIV-infected rhesus than those seen in rhesus macaques infected with type D retroviruses. A lentivirus, isolated from a rhesus inoculated with lymph node homogenate from a stump-tailed macaque, was designed SIVstm and was pathogenic for rhesus macaques. The isolate was antigenically related to other SIVs as well as to HIV-1 and HIV-2. Two surviving stump-tailed macaques sent to another colony carried SIVstm latently for at least 7 years and disseminated it throughout that colony.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1318381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Primatol ISSN: 0047-2565 Impact factor: 0.667