| Literature DB >> 30593377 |
Mengmeng Yu1, Lixiao Xing1, Fangfang Chang1, Yuanling Bao1, Suyan Wang1, Xijun He1, Jingfei Wang1, Shida Wang1, Yongzhen Liu1, Muhammad Farooque1, Qing Pan1, Yongqiang Wang1, Li Gao1, Xiaole Qi1, Altaf Hussain1, Kai Li1, Changjun Liu1, Yanping Zhang1, Hongyu Cui1, Xiaomei Wang2, Yulong Gao3.
Abstract
Avian metapneumovirus (aMPV), which has been reported in many countries, causes an acute upper respiratory tract disease in chickens and turkeys. Although aMPV was first detected in China in 1999, there has been no further effort to isolate and characterize the aMPV subtype B (aMPV/B) from field outbreaks. In the present study, we used Vero cells to culture a viral strain, LN16, isolated from chickens with swollen head syndrome. The results of RT-PCR, indirect immunofluorescent antibody, and G gene sequence analyses confirmed that strain LN16 corresponds to aMPV/B. We amplified and sequenced the complete genome of strain LN16 and found it to be 13,513 nucleotides in length. Nine viral protein genes of the strain were between 93.2% and 98.4% identical to those of the pathogenic field isolate VCO3/60616. However, insertions and deletions were detected in the intergenic regions. Animal experiments showed that 72.7% of chickens infected with strain LN16 had excess mucus, nasal discharge, and inflammation in the lungs and turbinate. In addition, 27.2% of chickens infected with LN16 shed progeny virions. Viral tissue distribution analysis showed that aMPV could be detected in the turbinate and occasionally in immune organs. This is the first report of the isolation of aMPV/B in China and the first complete genome sequence of aMPV/B from chicken. These findings enrich the epidemiological data on aMPV and may contribute to the development of effective measures to prevent its further spread in China.Entities:
Keywords: Avian metapneumovirus subtype B; Pathogenicity; Swollen head syndrome; Virus isolation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30593377 DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2018.11.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Microbiol ISSN: 0378-1135 Impact factor: 3.293