10 results on '"Bakonyi T"'
Search Results
2. Usutu Virus in Blackbirds ( Turdus merula), Czech Republic, 2011-2012.
- Author
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Hubálek, Z., Rudolf, I., Čapek, M., Bakonyi, T., Betášová, L., and Nowotny, N.
- Subjects
EUROPEAN blackbird ,RNA virus infections ,MICROBIOLOGY ,VETERINARY medicine - Abstract
The central European lineage of Usutu virus was isolated from a blackbird ( Turdus merula), which was found dead in the city of Brno, Czech Republic, in 2011. The virus RNA was detected in two other dead blackbirds in Brno during 2012. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Equine Encephalomyelitis Outbreak Caused by a Genetic Lineage 2 West Nile Virus in Hungary.
- Author
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Kutasi, O., Bakonyi, T., Lecollinet, S., Biksi, I., Ferenczi, E., Bahuon, C., Sardi, S., Zientara, S., and Szenci, O.
- Subjects
HORSE diseases ,ENCEPHALOMYELITIS ,WEST Nile virus ,NEUROLOGICAL disorders - Abstract
The spread of lineage 2 West Nile virus (WNV) from sub-Saharan regions to Europe and the unpredictable change in pathogenicity indicate a potential public and veterinary health threat and requires scientific awareness. To describe the results of clinical and virological investigations of the 1st outbreak of a genetic lineage 2 WNV encephalomyelitis in horses. Seventeen horses with neurologic signs. Information regarding signalment, clinical signs, and outcome was obtained for each animal. Serology was performed in 15 cases, clinicopathological examination in 7 cases, and cerebrospinal fluid was collected from 2 horses. Histopathology was carried out in 4 horses, 2 of which were assessed for the presence of WNV in their nervous system. WNV neutralizing antibody titers were between 10 and 270 (median, 90) and the results of other serological assays were in agreement with those of the plaque reduction neutralization test. Common signs included ataxia, weakness, asymmetric gait, muscle tremors, hypersensitivity, cranial nerve deficits, and recumbency. Twelve animals survived. Amplicons derived from the infection-positive specimens allowed molecular characterization of the viral strain. From our results, we conclude that this outbreak was caused by a lineage 2 WNV strain, even though such strains often are considered nonpathogenic. Neurological signs and survival rates were similar to those reported for lineage 1 virus infections. The disease occurrence was not geographically limited as had been the typical case during European outbreaks; this report describes a substantial northwestern spread of the pathogen. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Avian bornaviruses in psittacine birds from Europe and Australia with proventricular dilatation disease.
- Author
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Weissenböck H, Bakonyi T, Sekulin K, Ehrensperger F, Doneley RJ, Dürrwald R, Hoop R, Erdélyi K, Gál J, Kolodziejek J, Nowotny N, Weissenböck, Herbert, Bakonyi, Tamás, Sekulin, Karin, Ehrensperger, Felix, Doneley, Robert J T, Dürrwald, Ralf, Hoop, Richard, Erdélyi, Károly, and Gál, János
- Abstract
To determine whether avian bornaviruses (ABVs) were a factor in proventricular dilatation disease (PDD), we used immunohistochemistry, reverse transcription-PCR, and nucleotide sequence analysis to examine paraffin wax-embedded or frozen tissue samples of 31 psittacine birds with this disease. PDD is a fatal disease of psittacine birds associated with nonsuppurative encephalitis and ganglioneuritis of the upper intestinal tract. Tissue samples had been collected from 1999 through 2008 in Austria, Switzerland, Hungary, and Australia. Immunohistochemical demonstration of viral antigen within the brain and vegetative nerve system of the gastrointestinal tract provides strong evidence for a causative role of ABVs in this condition. Partial sequences of nucleoprotein (p40) and matrix protein (gp18) genes showed that virus in most of our cases belonged to the ABV-2 and ABV-4 groups among the 5 genogroups described so far. Viral sequences of 2 birds did not match any of the described sequences and clustered together in a new branch termed ABV-6. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Limited Pathogenicity of Usutu Virus for the Domestic Goose ( Anser anser f. domestica) Following Experimental Inoculation.
- Author
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Chvala, S., Bakonyi, T., Hackl, R., Hess, M., Nowotny, N., and Weissenböck, H.
- Subjects
MOSQUITO vectors ,FLAVIVIRUSES ,BIRD diseases ,MORTALITY ,GEESE ,VIRAL antigens ,VIRUS diseases ,VIRUSES - Abstract
Usutu virus (USUV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus of the Japanese encephalitis virus group, which has been associated with avian mortality in Austria since 2001. The affected birds are predominantly Eurasian blackbirds ( Turdus merula). In the present study, the pathogenicity of USUV for domestic geese ( Anser anser f. domestica) was investigated. Eleven 2-week-old geese were inoculated intramuscularly with 5 × 10
4 50% tissue culture infectious dose of USUV strain Vienna-2001 blackbird. No clinical signs were seen during the observation period. Four inoculated and one in-contact geese died without preceding clinical signs. Two of the deaths could be attributed to bacterial septicaemia and strangulation, respectively. The cause of death of two experimental and one in-contact animals remained unclear, but lack of evidence for viral lesions and viral antigen in their tissues argued against association with the USUV infection. Although in organs of the majority of inoculated geese (9/11) USUV was detected by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, immunohistochemistry for USUV antigen was negative in all tissues of all geese. Evidence of plasma viraemia or viral excretion was found in one goose only. Seroconversion was detected in three inoculated geese 10 days post-inoculation. Geese placed in contact with inoculated geese and control animals did not exhibit USUV in their internal organs or plasma and lacked USUV-specific antibodies. This experiment shows that USUV is able to replicate in geese, but does not induce clinical disease, is unlikely to induce mortality, and only infrequently leads to viraemia or virus shedding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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6. Limited pathogenicity of Usutu virus for the domestic chicken ( Gallus domesticus ).
- Author
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Chvala, S., Bakonyi, T., Hackl, R., Hess, M., Nowotny, N., and Weissenböck, H.
- Subjects
CHICKENS ,FLAVIVIRUSES ,NUCLEIC acids ,TISSUE culture ,BILIARY tract ,IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
In summer 2001, Usutu virus (USUV), a mosquito-borne flavivirus, was isolated for the first time in Europe during a mortality incident among Eurasian blackbirds ( Turdus merula ) in Austria. Chickens are frequently used as sentinel animals for arbovirus surveillance systems. In the present study, the pathogenicity of USUV for specific pathogen free chickens was investigated. Ten 2-week-old chickens were inoculated intravenously with 0.1 ml inoculum containing 10 3 median (50%) tissue culture infectious dose of USUV strain Vienna 2001-blackbird (939/01). Clinical signs, viraemia, gross and microscopic lesions, contact transmission and immunological response were evaluated. No clinical signs were observed in the USUV-inoculated animals during the experimental period. Pathological examination showed moderate splenomegaly and follicular infiltrates in the liver of several inoculated animals. Mild non-suppurative encephalitis was observed in the brain tissue of one virus-inoculated chicken examined 7 days post inoculation (d.p.i.). USUV nucleic acid was detected by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in the organs of six inoculated chickens, although immunohistochemistry for flavivirus antigen was negative in all tissues from all chickens. Virus shedding was shown in three inoculated birds by detecting USUV RNA in cloacal swabs of two chickens at 5 d.p.i., and in the cloacal and pharyngeal swabs of one chicken at 7 d.p.i. Based on detection of viral RNA in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, viraemia was detected only in two chickens (at 7 d.p.i.). Only one of the inoculated chickens developed an antibody response. There was no evidence of virus transmission to chickens kept in contact with inoculated birds. No USUV was isolated from in-contact birds and all in-contact and control animals lacked USUV-specific antibodies. The present data suggest that domestic chickens are not at risk of developing clinical disease following USUV infection and that chickens are unlikely to be useful for sentinel purposes in USUV surveillance programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A Novel Subgroup among Genotypes of Equine Arteritis Virus: Genetic Comparison of 40 Strains.
- Author
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Hornyák, Á., Bakonyi, T., Tekes, G., Szeredi, L., and Rusvai, M.
- Subjects
HORSE diseases ,ARTERITIS ,VIRUSES ,AMINO acids ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,ABORTION - Abstract
The authors determined partial nucleic sequences of the variable regions of open-reading frame (ORF5) from 151 nucleotide to 668 nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of 518 nucleotide respectively of 20 equine arteritis virus (EAV) isolates. About 19 Hungarian and one Austrian EAV strains were subjected to sequence analysis, the further data of 20 EAV strains: six North American and 14 European were obtained from the GenBank. Comparative sequence analysis of the Hungarian EAV strains indicated that among the three variable regions the first has been affected mostly by point mutations. Genetic comparison of the Hungarian strains with other EAV isolates from western Europe and North America (including the Bucyrus reference strain) has been performed on the aforementioned genome region. Besides the already known genetic subgroups of EAV; phylogenetic analysis revealed a novel subgroup comprising mainly Hungarian strains. Compared with the Bucyrus virus, the overall sequence divergencies of the examined Hungarian strains ranged from 81.47 to 90.73% at nucleotide and from 84.88 to 91.86% at amino acid level. Epizootiological studies have shown that the significant part of the EAV strains having been existed in Hungary before and in 2000 belong to this unique cluster (II.D) which was not indicated in former phylogenetic studies. After 2000 new EAV strains emerged in Hungary, one of them causing abortions or neonatal death. The previously dominant‘Hungarian’ EAV genotypes were replaced by these new strains belonging to North American and European subgroups (I.A, I.B, II.A, II.B). The anamnesis of these cases revealed connections with persistent virus shedder stallions, those were imported to the country after 2000 or have been infected abroad. One of these Hungarian stallions became the source of abortion storms in Hungarian studs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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8. Genetic characterization of West Nile virus lineage 2, Greece, 2010.
- Author
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Papa A, Bakonyi T, Xanthopoulou K, Vazquez A, Tenorio A, Nowotny N, Papa, Anna, Bakonyi, Tamás, Xanthopoulou, Kyriaki, Vázquez, Ana, Tenorio, Antonio, and Nowotny, Norbert
- Abstract
We conducted a complete genome analysis of a West Nile virus detected in Culex pipiens mosquitoes during a severe outbreak of human West Nile disease in Greece 2010. The virus showed closest genetic relationship to the lineage 2 strain that emerged in Hungary in 2004; increased virulence may be associated with amino acid substitution H249P. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Plasmid DNA contaminant in molecular reagents.
- Author
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Wally, N., Schneider, M., Thannesberger, J., Kastner, M. T., Bakonyi, T., Indik, S., Rattei, T., Bedarf, J., Hildebrand, F., Law, J., Jovel, J., and Steininger, C.
- Abstract
Background noise in metagenomic studies is often of high importance and its removal requires extensive post-analytic, bioinformatics filtering. This is relevant as significant signals may be lost due to a low signal-to-noise ratio. The presence of plasmid residues, that are frequently present in reagents as contaminants, has not been investigated so far, but may pose a substantial bias. Here we show that plasmid sequences from different sources are omnipresent in molecular biology reagents. Using a metagenomic approach, we identified the presence of the (pol) of equine infectious anemia virus in human samples and traced it back to the expression plasmid used for generation of a commercial reverse transcriptase. We found fragments of multiple other expression plasmids in human samples as well as commercial polymerase preparations. Plasmid contamination sources included production chain of molecular biology reagents as well as contamination of reagents from environment or human handling of samples and reagents. Retrospective analyses of published metagenomic studies revealed an inaccurate signal-to-noise differentiation. Hence, the plasmid sequences that seem to be omnipresent in molecular biology reagents may misguide conclusions derived from genomic/metagenomics datasets and thus also clinical interpretations. Critical appraisal of metagenomic data sets for the possibility of plasmid background noise is required to identify reliable and significant signals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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10. Encephalitis due to West Nile virus in a sheep.
- Author
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Kecskeméti, S., Bajmócy, E., Bacsadi, Á., Kiss, I., and Bakonyi, T.
- Subjects
EWES ,WEST Nile virus ,ENCEPHALITIS ,BRAIN diseases ,VETERINARY medicine - Abstract
The article describes the case of an ewe with West Nile Virus (WNV). An overview of the conducted study and the methods used are offered. Result shows that a non-suppurative encephalitis which was characterized by the brain's lymphocytic perivascular inflammatory infiltration that was accompanied by diffuse and focal gliosis.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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