Ezekiel S. Oloruntimehin, Sofya I. Volodina, Ivan V. Patraman, Grigory A. Nadtochey, Alexander S. Malogolovkin
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Molecular and ultrastructural characteristics of virulent and attenuated vaccine strains of goose parvovirus LIV-22
The disease caused by goose parvovirus (GPV) affects young goslings and ducks and leads to substantial losses for farmers due to high mortality rates, reaching 70-100% in naive flocks. Here, we present the results of a study focusing on the historical virulent GPV LIV-22 strain, which was isolated in the USSR in 1972. An attenuated GPV LIV-22 vaccine strain that was generated by continuous passaging in goose embryonic fibroblasts was also studied. Phylogenetic analysis placed both GPV LIV-22 strains in the classical GPV group, close to the vaccine and low-pathogenic strains. However, several individual changes in the GPV LIV-22 VP1 gene highlight the uniqueness of the evolution and adaptation mechanism of GPV LIV-22 strains. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) revealed severe ultrastructural changes in goose hepatocytes and enterocytes as early as 24-48 h postinfection, confirming abrupt GPV pathogenesis. This description of some of the essential characteristics of the GPV LIV-22 virulent and vaccine strain will be useful for studying GPV evolution and molecular pathogenesis.
期刊介绍:
Archives of Virology publishes original contributions from all branches of research on viruses, virus-like agents, and virus infections of humans, animals, plants, insects, and bacteria. Coverage spans a broad spectrum of topics, from descriptions of newly discovered viruses, to studies of virus structure, composition, and genetics, to studies of virus interactions with host cells, organisms and populations. Studies employ molecular biologic, molecular genetics, and current immunologic and epidemiologic approaches. Contents include studies on the molecular pathogenesis, pathophysiology, and genetics of virus infections in individual hosts, and studies on the molecular epidemiology of virus infections in populations. Also included are studies involving applied research such as diagnostic technology development, monoclonal antibody panel development, vaccine development, and antiviral drug development.Archives of Virology wishes to publish obituaries of recently deceased well-known virologists and leading figures in virology.