1. Severe neurologic disease and chick mortality in crested screamers (Chauna torquata) infected with a novel Gyrovirus
- Author
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Victoria L. Clyde, Annette Gendron-Fitzpatrick, Roberta S. Wallace, Tony L. Goldberg, and Samuel D. Sibley
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Genome, Viral ,Virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gyrovirus ,Circoviridae Infections ,Anseriformes ,Virology ,medicine ,Animals ,Anelloviridae ,Bird Diseases ,biology ,Transmission (medicine) ,DNA Viruses ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Coinfection ,Animals, Zoo ,Nervous System Diseases ,Chickens ,Chicken anemia virus - Abstract
Gyroviruses are small, single stranded DNA viruses in the family Anelloviridae. In chickens, the type virus (chicken anemia virus; CAV) causes epidemic disease in poultry flocks worldwide. In 2007 and 2008, young crested screamers (Chauna torquata) at a zoo in Wisconsin, USA, died of neurologic disease with clinical and pathological features resembling CAV infection. Conventional diagnostics were negative, but molecular analyses revealed coinfection of an affected bird with three variants of a novel Gyrovirus lineage, GyV10. Analysis of ten additional screamers from this and another zoo revealed infection in all but one bird, with co-infections and persistent infections common. The association between GyV10 ("screamer anemia virus," provisionally) and the disease remains unproven, but certain immunological and neurologic features of the syndrome would expand the known pathologic consequences of Gyrovirus infection. To control the virus, autogenous vaccines, environmental decontamination, and management strategies to limit vertical and horizontal transmission might prove effective.
- Published
- 2018