1. Association of jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus with pulmonary carcinoma in Sardinian moufflon (Ovis musimon).
- Author
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Sanna MP, Sanna E, De Las Heras M, Leoni A, Nieddu AM, Pirino S, Sharp JM, and Palmarini M
- Subjects
- Animals, DNA, Viral analysis, Disease Outbreaks veterinary, Immunoenzyme Techniques veterinary, In Situ Hybridization veterinary, Italy, Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus genetics, Lymph Nodes pathology, Lymph Nodes virology, Macrophages, Alveolar pathology, Macrophages, Alveolar virology, Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary, Pulmonary Adenomatosis, Ovine epidemiology, Pulmonary Adenomatosis, Ovine pathology, Pulmonary Alveoli pathology, Pulmonary Alveoli virology, Rabbits, Sheep, Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus isolation & purification, Pulmonary Adenomatosis, Ovine virology
- Abstract
Bronchiolo-alveolar carcinoma has been described in man and in several animal species, including cattle, dogs, opossums, goats and sheep. In sheep, a bronchiolo-alveolar carcinoma, known as ovine pulmonary carcinoma (OPC), is caused by jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV), an exogenous type D retrovirus. In the mid-1980s, a severe outbreak of a disease resembling OPC was described in captive Sardinian moufflon (Ovis musimon). In the present study, the use of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of nucleic acids extracted from archival material established that JSRV was associated with OPC in affected moufflon. JSRV was detected in the lungs and mediastinal lymph nodes. Immunohistochemical and in-situ PCR demonstrated that in the lungs, JSRV proviral DNA was localized in transformed and untransformed type II pneumocytes and in the alveolar macrophages. In the mediastinal lymph nodes, JSRV DNA was mainly located in the cortical follicles and paracortex. These data suggest that JSRV is the cause of OPC in Sardinian moufflon, as it is in Sardinian sheep., (Copyright Harcourt Publishers Ltd.)
- Published
- 2001
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