1. Novel avian bornavirus in a nonpsittacine species (Canary; Serinus canaria) with enteric ganglioneuritis and encephalitis.
- Author
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Weissenböck H, Sekulin K, Bakonyi T, Högler S, and Nowotny N
- Subjects
- Animals, Bornaviridae classification, Bornaviridae genetics, Brain pathology, Brain virology, Gizzard, Avian pathology, Gizzard, Avian virology, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Proventriculus pathology, Proventriculus virology, Sequence Alignment, Bird Diseases pathology, Bird Diseases physiopathology, Bird Diseases virology, Bornaviridae pathogenicity, Canaries virology, Encephalitis physiopathology, Encephalitis veterinary, Encephalitis virology, Enteric Nervous System pathology, Enteric Nervous System physiopathology, Enteric Nervous System virology, Ganglia pathology, Ganglia physiopathology, Ganglia virology, Neuritis physiopathology, Neuritis veterinary, Neuritis virology
- Abstract
A canary bird (Serinus canaria) died with nonsuppurative ganglioneuritis of the proventriculus and gizzard and encephalitis, lesions comparable to proventricular dilatation disease (PDD) of psittacine birds. Recently, several genotypes of a novel avian bornavirus have been linked to PDD. In the canary, bornaviral antigen was detected by immunohistochemistry in both neural and extraneural tissues. The widespread viral dissemination was confirmed by reverse transcription-PCR. Sequence analysis revealed a unique genotype of avian bornavirus. This observation suggests that bornaviruses are natural pathogens of several avian species and that the family Bornaviridae comprises more viral genotypes (or viral species) than previously assumed.
- Published
- 2009
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