Which virus causes Chicken Anaemia Virus Disease and what are it's properties?
Chicken anaemia virus (CAV):
Non-enveloped icosahedral single stranded DNA (ssDNA) virus
23-25 nm diameter
Small circular genome of negative sense
Very hardy and resistant to high temperatures, acidic pH (pH3), chloroform and commercial disinfectants.
Morphologically and antigenically different to other circoviruses such as Porcine circovirus (PCV) and Psittacine beak and feather disease virus (PBFDV).
Non-enveloped icosahedral single stranded DNA (ssDNA) virus
VP1 (52kDA) - structural protein; intracellular form of the capsid protein
VP2 (24 kDA) - found in small amounts in the purified virus
VP3 (14 kDA) - involved in apoptosis (programmed and controlled cell death with no lysis of the cell. Causes apoptosis of infected stem cells in the bone marrow (BM). Sequential damage to BM inhibits the production of red blood cells (RBC), white blood cells (WBC), lymphoid tissue and platelets.
Vaccines need to contain both VP1 and VP2 to be antigenic.
Due to VP3 apoptotic properties it has the potential to be an anti-cancer agent.
Horizontally through fomites and faecal-oral as the virus is excreted by a small number of vertically infected hatch mates. This occurs in older chickens that lack maternal derived antibodies.
Vertically as chicks hatch from infected layers of naive flocks over a period of 3 to 6 weeks. After this period the breeder layers develop sufficient CAV antibodies to stop the transmission of the virus to the egg. Clinical signs are seen in 10-14 day old chicks.
Severe atrophy of the lymphoid organs (thymus, bursa of Fabricius, and to a lesser extent the spleen). All become depleted of lymphocytes and reticular cells become hyperplastic.
Haemorrhages throughout the skeletal muscle and subcutaneous tissue
Pale watery yellow bone marrow - due to severe aplasia of the BM and the haematopoietic cells being replaced with adipose tissue