大规模的啮齿动物生产方法使供应商的隔离室不太可能发生持续的低流行率细小病毒感染。

William R Shek, Kathleen R Pritchett, Charles B Clifford, William J White
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摘要

Pullium及其同事最近在《实验动物科学当代专题》上发表的一篇文章表示,由于在部署前哨兵小鼠中检测到的细小病毒污染没有找到其他来源,因此感染显然来自未指明的供应商,尽管在小鼠到达后3周内没有检测到抗体。由于这一观点可能会得到其他人的认同,并表达了在使用笼级生物隔离房屋的设施中检测细小病毒感染来源的一些深刻挫折,查尔斯河实验室(CRL)认为有必要通过声称自己是Pullium文章中未具名的供应商,并讨论为什么CRL隔离室内的细小病毒污染会被快速检测出来,从而促进科学对话。我们展示了CRL隔离室中的病毒感染迅速达到高流行率,并且历史上这种污染被快速检测到,并且我们描述了为什么我们认为当前监测方法的增强提供了更快速检测细小病毒。此外,我们提供了大量证据表明,根据所有可用技术对数百只小鼠的监测,作为客户怀疑哨兵小鼠来源的屏障室仍然没有任何细小病毒。因此,尽管最初列出的所有可能的污染源应该谨慎地包括供应商,但压倒性的证据表明,该供应商不是Pullium论文中讨论的细小病毒污染的来源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Large-scale rodent production methods make vendor barrier rooms unlikely to have persistent low-prevalence parvoviral infections.

A recent article in Contemporary Topics in Laboratory Animal Science by Pullium and colleagues expressed the opinion that because no other source could be found for a parvoviral contamination detected in sentinel mice prior to deployment, the infection apparently came from the unspecified vendor, even though no antibodies were ever detected in mice within 3 weeks of arrival. As this opinion may be shared by others and expresses some of the deep frustration in trying to detect the source of parvoviral infection in facilities using cage-level bioexclusion housing, Charles River Laboratories (CRL) feels it important to contribute to scientific dialogue by claiming to be the unnamed vendor in the Pullium article and discussing why a parvoviral contamination in a CRL barrier room would be detected rapidly. We show that viral infections in CRL barrier rooms rapidly reach high prevalence and that such contaminations historically have been detected quickly, and we describe why we feel enhancements in current monitoring methods provide for even more rapid detection of parvoviruses. Furthermore, we present substantial evidence that the barrier rooms that served as the source of the customer-suspect sentinel mice remain free of all parvoviruses, in light of monitoring of hundreds of mice by all available techniques. Therefore, although an initial list of all possible sources of contamination prudently should include vendors, the evidence is overwhelming that this vendor was not the source of the parvoviral contamination discussed in the Pullium paper.

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