First description of a herpesvirus infection in genus Lepus.

During the necropsies of Iberian hares obtained in 2018/2019, along with signs of the nodular form of myxomatosis, other unexpected external lesions were also observed. Histopathology revealed nuclear inclusion bodies in stromal cells suggesting the additional presence of a nuclear replicating virus...

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Main Authors: F A Abade dos Santos, M Monteiro, A Pinto, C L Carvalho, M C Peleteiro, P Carvalho, P Mendonça, T Carvalho, M D Duarte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231795
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spelling doaj-d46760da7fe246258c056198310034212021-03-03T21:47:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01154e023179510.1371/journal.pone.0231795First description of a herpesvirus infection in genus Lepus.F A Abade dos SantosM MonteiroA PintoC L CarvalhoM C PeleteiroP CarvalhoP MendonçaT CarvalhoM D DuarteDuring the necropsies of Iberian hares obtained in 2018/2019, along with signs of the nodular form of myxomatosis, other unexpected external lesions were also observed. Histopathology revealed nuclear inclusion bodies in stromal cells suggesting the additional presence of a nuclear replicating virus. Transmission electron microscopy further demonstrated the presence of herpesvirus particles in the tissues of affected hares. We confirmed the presence of herpesvirus in 13 MYXV-positive hares by PCR and sequencing analysis. Herpesvirus-DNA was also detected in seven healthy hares, suggesting its asymptomatic circulation. Phylogenetic analysis based on concatenated partial sequences of DNA polymerase gene and glycoprotein B gene enabled greater resolution than analysing the sequences individually. The hare' virus was classified close to herpesviruses from rodents within the Rhadinovirus genus of the gammaherpesvirus subfamily. We propose to name this new virus Leporid gammaherpesvirus 5 (LeHV-5), according to the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses standards. The impact of herpesvirus infection on the reproduction and mortality of the Iberian hare is yet unknown but may aggravate the decline of wild populations caused by the recently emerged natural recombinant myxoma virus.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231795
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F A Abade dos Santos
M Monteiro
A Pinto
C L Carvalho
M C Peleteiro
P Carvalho
P Mendonça
T Carvalho
M D Duarte
spellingShingle F A Abade dos Santos
M Monteiro
A Pinto
C L Carvalho
M C Peleteiro
P Carvalho
P Mendonça
T Carvalho
M D Duarte
First description of a herpesvirus infection in genus Lepus.
PLoS ONE
author_facet F A Abade dos Santos
M Monteiro
A Pinto
C L Carvalho
M C Peleteiro
P Carvalho
P Mendonça
T Carvalho
M D Duarte
author_sort F A Abade dos Santos
title First description of a herpesvirus infection in genus Lepus.
title_short First description of a herpesvirus infection in genus Lepus.
title_full First description of a herpesvirus infection in genus Lepus.
title_fullStr First description of a herpesvirus infection in genus Lepus.
title_full_unstemmed First description of a herpesvirus infection in genus Lepus.
title_sort first description of a herpesvirus infection in genus lepus.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description During the necropsies of Iberian hares obtained in 2018/2019, along with signs of the nodular form of myxomatosis, other unexpected external lesions were also observed. Histopathology revealed nuclear inclusion bodies in stromal cells suggesting the additional presence of a nuclear replicating virus. Transmission electron microscopy further demonstrated the presence of herpesvirus particles in the tissues of affected hares. We confirmed the presence of herpesvirus in 13 MYXV-positive hares by PCR and sequencing analysis. Herpesvirus-DNA was also detected in seven healthy hares, suggesting its asymptomatic circulation. Phylogenetic analysis based on concatenated partial sequences of DNA polymerase gene and glycoprotein B gene enabled greater resolution than analysing the sequences individually. The hare' virus was classified close to herpesviruses from rodents within the Rhadinovirus genus of the gammaherpesvirus subfamily. We propose to name this new virus Leporid gammaherpesvirus 5 (LeHV-5), according to the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses standards. The impact of herpesvirus infection on the reproduction and mortality of the Iberian hare is yet unknown but may aggravate the decline of wild populations caused by the recently emerged natural recombinant myxoma virus.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231795
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