Difference between revisions of "Paramyxoviridae"

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==Bovine==
 
==Bovine==
===Bovine Parainfluenza - 3 (PI-3)===
+
===[[Bovine Parainfluenza - 3 (PI-3)]]===
*Virulence varies with isolates
 
*Cessation of [[Respiratory System General Introduction - Pathology#Mucociliary escalator|ciliary clearance]] and epithelial necrosis predisposes to secondary bacterial infections -> cough
 
*May cause [[Respiratory Viral Infections - Pathology#Parainfluenza- 3|rhinitis]] of cattle
 
*With other agents causes [[Respiratory Bacterial Infections - Pathology#Enzootic pneumonia of calves|calf pneumonia ]]
 
**Together with managemental factors (overcrowding, poor ventilation, high humidity, deprivation of colostrum and stress caused by transport or mixing of stock)
 
*'''Diagnosis'''
 
**Diseased lung tissue from dead animals or centrifuged cells from lung lavage
 
**Virus is too fragile for cell culture isolation (often inactivated intransport)
 
**Antigen detection by ''' immunocytochemistry''' for intracytoplasmic viral inclusions containing labelled viral protein
 
**Serology: 4-fold rise in ELISA antibody in paired serum samples from several animals
 
*'''Control'''
 
**Improve managemental factors
 
**All-in, all-out systems
 
**Some vaccination
 
***Temperature sensitive mutant that replicates at 34<sup>o</sup>C but not at 37<sup>o</sup>C
 
***Re-infection is common
 
  
 
===Bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus (BRSV)===
 
===Bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus (BRSV)===

Revision as of 18:42, 13 October 2008



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VIRUSES



Introduction

Morphology

  • Single-stranded negative-sense unsegmented RNA virus
  • Reassortment and antigenic shift cannot occur
  • Spike proteins include
    • HN (Haemagglutinin and Neuraminidase)
    • F (Fusion glycoprotein), which allows the virus to fuse directly to the plasma membrane and release its RNA
      • F also causes syncitium to form, which aids diagnosis
      • Host antibody response to the F protein is the basis for vaccination

Virulence

  • Paramyxoviruses replicate in the epithelium of the upper respiratory tract as well as occasionally in the gut
    • Sites of spike protein cleavage
  • Virulence varies by virus, see below

Types and Subtypes

Paramoyxoviridae was reclassified in 2000 to include 2 subfamilies and 5 genera:

Antigenic Variation

  • Antigenic conservation allows some cross protection by vaccination:
    • Conservation of major virus-specific F/HN antigens means vaccines protect against all isolates of the same virus
    • Minor morbillivirus-specific epitopes on F allows some cross protection between canine distemper, measles, and rinderpest
  • Antigenic "fingerprinting" is possible for some viruses based on minor variable epitopes of HN, F and NP on specific isolates as detected by monoclonal antibodies
    • These are detected by immunostaining infected cells

Paramyxoviridae by Species

Avian

Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV)

Canine

Canine Parainfluenza - 2 (aka Parainfluenza - 5)

Canine Distemper Virus (CDV)

Bovine

Bovine Parainfluenza - 3 (PI-3)

Bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus (BRSV)

  • Pathogenesis:
    • More serious than PI-3
    • Causes [Respiratory Viral Infections - Pathology#Respiratory syncytial virus|respiratory infection]]
    • Replicates in nasal epithelium -> throughout upper respiratory tract -> bronchial tree
    • Syncytia form -> shed into bronchioles
    • Complications include emphysema and oedema, drop in milk yield in adult cattle
  • Epidemiology:
    • Subclinical reinfections are important in spreading disease
    • More than 70% of cattle in the UK have antibodies to BRSV
  • Diagnosis is same as for PI-3
  • Control
    • Improve husbansry as in PI-3
    • Vaccines are available but not effective as need to stimulate cytotoxic T-cells
  • Reference: Bryson, 1999, Update on calf pneumonia, CPD Veterinary Medicine, 1,3, 90-95

Equine

Hendra Virus

  • Equine Paramyxovirus
  • Causes respiratory infections with respiratory distress and paralysis
  • Potentially zoonotic (beware palpating inside the throat for obstruction)

Porcine

Nipah Virus

  • Infects pigs and humans
  • Humans exposed to pig blood are at risk

Reptiles

Reptilian Paramyxoviruses

  • Infect central nervous system and lungs
  • Kill particularly snakes
  • Healthy reptiles may be carriers
  • Testing by serology - HI test
  • Aim to keep virus free collection and prevent spread back into the wild

Rodentia

Murine Parainfluenza - 1 (Sendai virus)

  • Endemic in many mouse colonies
  • Most mice show no symptoms due to maternal antibodies
  • But minor respiratory lesions may invalidate carcinogenic or toxicological studies
  • Immunological studies also confused due to virus activating NK cells via high circulating IF 3-4 days post-infection
  • Control achieved by:
    • Purchasing specific pathogen free (SPF) mice
    • Kill whole colony in an outbreak -> disinfection -> formalin fumigation

Other resources


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