Another virus mutation - Poultry this time

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Found this news article and thought it might be of interest to the folks with chickens and other poultry. *****************************************************

Source: University Of Illinois At Urbana-Champaign (http://www.uiuc.edu/) Date: 5/3/2001

Chickens Succumbing To Virus Formerly Avoided By Vaccination

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A virus common to poultry is outfoxing a long-used vaccine, apparently through natural genetic engineering and by using strategies to survive environmental insults, says a University of Illinois researcher who has been tracking new outbreaks around the world. A new form of fowlpox, he said, now threatens poultry production and requires a new vaccine strategy. Live vaccines have been used for more than 50 years to protect commercial poultry against fowlpox – a slow-spreading infection in birds for which there is no treatment. A new viral strain, carrying genes from an unrelated avian virus, has arisen to cause disease in previously vaccinated chickens in Arkansas, California, Indiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, New York and Pennsylvania.

Deoki N. Tripathy, a professor of veterinary pathobiology in the UI College of Veterinary Medicine, summarized the situation in a presentation during the 50th Western Poultry Disease Conference in March at the University of California at Davis.

“In most of these occurrences, the diphtheritic form of the disease, which attacks the eyes, throats and trachea, results in high mortality,” Tripathy said. “Reduced egg production with significant economic losses in affected layer flocks also has been observed.” A molecular analysis of the new form of the virus in the United States and in Australia shows the integration of a retrovirus, avian reticuloendotheliosis virus (REV), into its genome. While fowlpox virus vaccines carry a portion of REV, the new strains contain intact REV.

In the February issue of the Journal of Virology, Tripathy reported that the fowlpox virus also has two other genes. One encodes for an enzyme, photolyase, which allows for the repair of DNA damaged by sunlight, and the other for a protein that shields the virus from environmental damage.

“The virus has acquired several genes that are not vital for its multiplication but provide a good strategy for prolonged survival,” he said. Since fowlpox is among the largest of viruses – more than 200 genes encoding for essential and non-essential proteins – it is not surprising to find “spontaneous, natural genetic engineering” occurring between distinct viruses attacking the same birds, he said. In large poultry operations, birds face multiple pathogens.

Fowlpox occurs as a dry pox, which results in wart-like nodules on the skin that turn to scabs, and/or a usually fatal wet pox that affects the oral cavity and upper respiratory system. Most birds recover from dry pox within three to five weeks but not without losses in egg production or growth.

The scabs from dry pox that fall from infected birds can contain millions of virus particles and survive for months in the poultry environment. Infection can spread into injured or lacerated skin, and by birds inhaling dust containing the particles. Mosquitoes also can transmit the disease.

Tripathy and his colleagues are researching a new generation of poultry vaccines.

-------------------------------------------------------------------- Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University Of Illinois At Urbana-Champaign for journalists and other members of the public. If you wish to quote from any part of this story, please credit University Of Illinois At Urbana-Champaign as the original source. You may also wish to include the following link in any citation:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/05/010503092806.htm

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-- Lynn Goltz (lynngoltz@aol.com), May 03, 2001

Answers

Lynn -

Thanks...

I guess our great-grandparents had to deal with most of this stuff, too... But GEEEEEZ!!!! Sometimes I think with all the mutations that our livestock was healthier when the vets and the scientists were hundreds of miles away.....

-- Sue Diederich (willow666@rocketmail.com), May 04, 2001.


Sue, I think our present day mobility contributes significantly to the problem. I expect you are correct in saying our forebearers had to deal with similar problems; however, they did not get around as we do and thereby spread the germs around. In other words, things were more localized years ago. My Grandmother, who just died at 105, told me on several occasions that when they lived on the prairies of Nebraska in the early 1910's they would go weeks without a visitor to their farm. They went to town every few months, a trip of forty miles requiring all day to get there with the horse drawn wagon. Progress has its price.

-- Lynn Goltz (lynngoltz@aol.com), May 04, 2001.

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