circoviridae Flashcards
(17 cards)
family circoviridae has two genus groups
circovirus and gyrovirus
circovirus has three species
Psittacine beak and feather disease, Porcine circovirus type 1 ( non path), Porcine circovirus type 2 ( Post weaning multi systemic wasting syndrome (PMWS))
gyrovirus has one species
chicken infectious anemia virus
circoviridae general
small 17-22nm
circovirus=ambisense ss circular DNA
gyrovirus= circular ss negative sense DNA
chicken infectious anemia has 12 trumpet like structures
circoviridae replication
occurs in actively dividing cells, DNA rep in nucleus during S phase of Interphase
virions stable at pH 3-9 and 30 min at 60 degrees celcius
Post-weaning Multisystemic Wasting Syndrome (PMWS)
caused by porcine circovirus 2 pigs 4-6 weeks or post weaning 2-3 weeks worldwide distribution fecal oral transmission virus in all secretions, can survive in stable and on fomites
PMWS pathogenesis
replication not well understood
botyroid (grape-like) intra-cytoplasmic inclusion bodies in virus infected macrophages
targets cardiomyocytes, hepatocytes, and macrophages during fetal life and mainly monocytes in early post-natal life
lymphnode depletion in pigs, Loss of B and T cells
PMWS transmission and clinical signs
transplacental in first and second trimesters
subclinical most common, lethargy ictherus, congenital tremors
can be co-infection with porcine parvovirus cause more sever disease (aborted fetus and mummies stillborn fetuses)
M. hyopneumonia co infection causes chronic bronchopneumonia
PMWS diagnosis
blood, tonsils, lymph nodes, spleen ileum
characteristic histopath, PCR, serological assays
PMWS vaccination
chimeric vaccines-use non path PCV-1 to express capsid of PCV-2
inactivated or baculovirus-expressed-PCV-2 inside capsid protein
Porcine Dermatitis and Nephropathy Syndrome
associated with PCV2, sporadic, older pigs, skin lesions, vasculitis and glomerulonephritis all necrotizing
gyrovirus
chicken infectious anemia
chicken infectious anemia
chicken anemia virus, member of circoviridae
host-young chickens
transmission-feces and feather dander, inhalation, egg, stable in environment
Chicken infectious anemia pathogenesis
hemocytoblasts in the bone marrow, precursor T cells in thymus and CD8 and CD4 in spleen, apoprotein induces apoptosis, immunosuppression and aplastic anemia, vulnerable to secondary bacterial and fungal infection, estrogen level increased will speed along replication
Chicken infectious anemia clinical signs
anorexic, lethargic, depressed, pale, blood watery, slow clotting, PCV low, sub q hemorrhage, atrophy of thymus, apple carcass and bone marrow, atrophy of bursa
chicken infectious anemia diagnosis
clinical signs, low PCV, trhombocytopenia, necropsy, ELISA, PCR, neutralization test
Chicken infectious anemia vaccination
antibodies in breeders reduce transmission, the vaccine protects the progeny from vaccinated breeders by using maternal antibodies, injection, control of Mareks important since genetical similar