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Investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing

This report characterizes the first lethal outbreak of Marek’s disease on a large farm of mixed-breed adult ducks (>18,000) and identifies the pathogen that resulted in high mortality (35%). Clinical signs included inappetence, respiratory distress, depression, muscle weakness, and ataxia. Post m...

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Autores principales: Damir, Hassan Abu, Ahmad, Waqar, Panicker, Neena G., Mohamed, Layla I., Omer, Elhag A., Kinne, Jörg, Wernery, Ulrich, Adem, Abdu, Ali, Mahmoud A., Mustafa, Farah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9882916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36706167
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280923
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author Damir, Hassan Abu
Ahmad, Waqar
Panicker, Neena G.
Mohamed, Layla I.
Omer, Elhag A.
Kinne, Jörg
Wernery, Ulrich
Adem, Abdu
Ali, Mahmoud A.
Mustafa, Farah
author_facet Damir, Hassan Abu
Ahmad, Waqar
Panicker, Neena G.
Mohamed, Layla I.
Omer, Elhag A.
Kinne, Jörg
Wernery, Ulrich
Adem, Abdu
Ali, Mahmoud A.
Mustafa, Farah
author_sort Damir, Hassan Abu
collection PubMed
description This report characterizes the first lethal outbreak of Marek’s disease on a large farm of mixed-breed adult ducks (>18,000) and identifies the pathogen that resulted in high mortality (35%). Clinical signs included inappetence, respiratory distress, depression, muscle weakness, and ataxia. Post mortem revealed enlarged fragile liver mottled with miliary whitish spots and an enlarged spleen. Histopathology revealed hepatocellular necrosis with eosinophilic intra-nuclear inclusion bodies, necrosis of splenic follicles and degeneration/necrosis of renal tubules. The disease was tentatively diagnosed as a herpesvirus infection, confirmed by virus isolation from the liver. DNA was isolated from 15-year-old archival formalin-fixed tissues from infected ducks and subjected to next generation sequencing (NGS). Despite highly degraded DNA, short stretches of G- and C-rich repeats (TTAGGG and TAACCC) were identified as telomeric repeats frequently found in herpesviruses. Megablast and further investigative bioinformatics identified presence of Marek’s disease virus (MDV), a Gallid alphaherpesvirus type 2 (GAHV-2), as the cause of the acute fatal infection. The source of infection may be attributed to a dead migratory flamingo found close to the duck enclosures three days prior to the outbreak; hence, GAHV-2 may also be responsible for the fatal infection of the flamingo accentuated by heat stress. Considering the possible spread of this highly contagious and lethal virus from a flamingo to the ducks, and the increasing zoonosis of animal viruses into humans, such as monkey B alphaherpesvirus transmission from macaques to humans with ~80% fatality, this observation has important ramifications for human health and safety of the poultry industry.
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spelling pubmed-98829162023-01-28 Investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing Damir, Hassan Abu Ahmad, Waqar Panicker, Neena G. Mohamed, Layla I. Omer, Elhag A. Kinne, Jörg Wernery, Ulrich Adem, Abdu Ali, Mahmoud A. Mustafa, Farah PLoS One Research Article This report characterizes the first lethal outbreak of Marek’s disease on a large farm of mixed-breed adult ducks (>18,000) and identifies the pathogen that resulted in high mortality (35%). Clinical signs included inappetence, respiratory distress, depression, muscle weakness, and ataxia. Post mortem revealed enlarged fragile liver mottled with miliary whitish spots and an enlarged spleen. Histopathology revealed hepatocellular necrosis with eosinophilic intra-nuclear inclusion bodies, necrosis of splenic follicles and degeneration/necrosis of renal tubules. The disease was tentatively diagnosed as a herpesvirus infection, confirmed by virus isolation from the liver. DNA was isolated from 15-year-old archival formalin-fixed tissues from infected ducks and subjected to next generation sequencing (NGS). Despite highly degraded DNA, short stretches of G- and C-rich repeats (TTAGGG and TAACCC) were identified as telomeric repeats frequently found in herpesviruses. Megablast and further investigative bioinformatics identified presence of Marek’s disease virus (MDV), a Gallid alphaherpesvirus type 2 (GAHV-2), as the cause of the acute fatal infection. The source of infection may be attributed to a dead migratory flamingo found close to the duck enclosures three days prior to the outbreak; hence, GAHV-2 may also be responsible for the fatal infection of the flamingo accentuated by heat stress. Considering the possible spread of this highly contagious and lethal virus from a flamingo to the ducks, and the increasing zoonosis of animal viruses into humans, such as monkey B alphaherpesvirus transmission from macaques to humans with ~80% fatality, this observation has important ramifications for human health and safety of the poultry industry. Public Library of Science 2023-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9882916/ /pubmed/36706167 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280923 Text en © 2023 Damir et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Damir, Hassan Abu
Ahmad, Waqar
Panicker, Neena G.
Mohamed, Layla I.
Omer, Elhag A.
Kinne, Jörg
Wernery, Ulrich
Adem, Abdu
Ali, Mahmoud A.
Mustafa, Farah
Investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing
title Investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing
title_full Investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing
title_fullStr Investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing
title_short Investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing
title_sort investigation of a herpesvirus outbreak in mixed breeds of adult domestic ducks using next generation sequencing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9882916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36706167
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280923
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