46 results on '"Skilling DE"'
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2. Distribution in the North Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea, and Arctic Ocean of animal populations known to carry pathogenic caliciviruses
- Author
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Smith, AW, primary, Skilling, DE, additional, Barlough, JE, additional, and Berry, ES, additional
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Virus-specific antiviral treatment for controlling severe and fatal outbreaks of feline calicivirus infection.
- Author
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Smith AW, Iversen PL, O'Hanley PD, Skilling DE, Christensen JR, Weaver SS, Longley K, Stone MA, Poet SE, and Matson DO
- Subjects
- Animals, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Caliciviridae Infections drug therapy, Caliciviridae Infections epidemiology, Cat Diseases drug therapy, Cat Diseases epidemiology, Cats, Female, Male, Morpholinos, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary, Calicivirus, Feline, Cat Diseases virology, Disease Outbreaks veterinary, Morpholines therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective: To test the life-sparing and therapeutic effect of a parenterally administered virus-specific antiviral phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomer (PMO) for treating kittens during outbreaks of severe viral disease., Animals: 112 kittens of various sex and age in 4 trials involving 3 outbreaks of naturally developing caliciviral disease., Procedures: Each trial provided an opportunity to investigate the disease. A calicivirus isolated from the liver of a cat that died with hemorrhage and hepatitis was sequenced, and a PMO that had sequence specificity complementary to a 5' region was synthesized. In vitro efficacy of the PMO was tested against the isolate, followed by 3 trials in outbreaks of severe caliciviral disease. The PMO was administered starting on day 1 of disease onset (0.7 to 5.0 mg/kg, SC, q 24 h) and continuing for up to 7 days. Survival time, clinical recovery, and caliciviral shedding were compared by use of various antiviral dosages. In a fourth trial involving nonfatal disease, a control treatment was administered for comparison., Results: In vitro blockage of caliciviral replication by the PMO was dose dependent. In trials 1 to 3 in which survival was the endpoint, 47 of 59 cats receiving PMO survived but only 3 of 31 survived without PMO treatment. Antiviral treatment reduced viral shedding and hastened clinical recovery, as measured by weight gains and clinical condition., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: These data provided evidence that virus-specific PMOs were effective in treating kittens with severe Vesivirus disease and suggested a broader application for other viruses and species, including humans.
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- 2008
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- View/download PDF
4. Serologic evidence of vesivirus-specific antibodies associated with abortion in horses.
- Author
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Kurth A, Skilling DE, and Smith AW
- Subjects
- Abortion, Veterinary blood, Animals, Caliciviridae Infections immunology, Female, Horse Diseases blood, Horses, Male, Pregnancy, Abortion, Veterinary immunology, Abortion, Veterinary virology, Antibodies, Viral blood, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary, Horse Diseases immunology, Horse Diseases virology, Vesivirus immunology
- Abstract
Objective: To test horses for serologic evidence of an association between vesiviral antibodies and abortion., Sample Population: Sera from 141 horses., Procedures: 2 experiments were conducted. Experiment 1 comprised sera obtained in 2001 and 2002 from 3 groups of horses (58 mares from farms with a history of abortion problems, 25 mares between 3 and 13 years of age with unknown reproductive histories that were sold at auction [breeding-age control mares], and 29 mixed-age males and yearling females sold at auction [negative control population]). Experiment 2 comprised sera from 3 groups of pregnant mares (10 pregnant mares fed Eastern tent caterpillars [ETCs], 9 pregnant mares fed ETC frass only, and 10 pregnant control mares). Sera were analyzed for antibodies against vesivirus by use of a validated recombinant vesivirusspecific peptide antigen in an indirect ELISA., Results: For experiment 1, 37 of 58 (63.8%) mares from farms with abortion problems were seropositive for vesivirus antibodies, whereas 10 of 25 (40%) breeding-age control mares were seropositive. All 29 mixed-age males and yearling females were seronegative for vesivirus antibodies. For experiment 2, 17 of 29 mares aborted (some from each group). Seropositive status for vesivirus antibodies increased from 47.1% (8/17) to 88.2% (15/17) for the pregnant mares that aborted during the experiment., Conclusion and Clinical Relevance: Significant association was detected between seropositive status for vesivirus and abortion in mares; consequently, vesivirus appears to be a pathogenic virus associated with abortion in mares. These data support adding vesivirus antibody testing into diagnostic screening to determine the cause for abortion in mares.
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- 2006
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5. Vesivirus viremia and seroprevalence in humans.
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Smith AW, Iversen PL, Skilling DE, Stein DA, Bok K, and Matson DO
- Subjects
- Alanine Transaminase blood, Amino Acid Sequence, Base Sequence, Caliciviridae Infections blood, Capsid Proteins genetics, DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases genetics, Genes, Viral, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sequence Alignment, Seroepidemiologic Studies, United States epidemiology, Vesivirus genetics, Antibodies, Viral blood, Blood Donors, Caliciviridae Infections epidemiology, Vesivirus immunology, Vesivirus isolation & purification, Viremia epidemiology
- Abstract
Pathogenic caliciviruses of the genus Vesivirus circulate in oceanic ecosystems and spread to and among terrestrial mammals. Isolation of Vesivirus from natural and laboratory infections in humans led to this investigation of Vesivirus seroprevalence and viremia. Sera from four groups were tested for antibodies to Vesivirus as follows: blood donors whose units were cleared for donation, blood donors whose units were not accepted for donation solely because of elevated blood liver alanine aminotransferase (ALT) concentrations, patients with clinical hepatitis of unknown but suspected infectious cause, and patients with clinical hepatitis of unknown cause but associated with blood transfusion or dialysis. Additionally, sera were tested for Vesivirus genome by three methods: dot-blot and two reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) methods. The calculated seroprevalence against Vesivirus virions within these groups (N = 765) was 12%, 21%, 29%, and 47%, respectively (P < 0.001 for group differences). Additionally, 11 (9.8%) of 112 sera tested yielded RT-PCR amplicons that by nucleotide sequence were distinct from each other and related to known Vesivirus. These data indicate that some blood donors in the population tested have serologic evidence of previous Vesivirus infection and some also have Vesivirus viremia. These results justify further investigation of an association between Vesivirus infection and illness in humans., (Copyright 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2006
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6. Prevalence of vesivirus in a laboratory-based set of serum samples obtained from dairy and beef cattle.
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Kurth A, Evermann JF, Skilling DE, Matson DO, and Smith AW
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- Animals, Antibodies, Viral blood, Caliciviridae Infections blood, Caliciviridae Infections epidemiology, Cattle, Cattle Diseases blood, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay veterinary, Female, Logistic Models, Male, Seroepidemiologic Studies, United States epidemiology, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary, Cattle Diseases epidemiology, Cattle Diseases virology, Vesivirus
- Abstract
Objective: To examine sera obtained from dairy and beef cattle to detect antibodies against vesivirus and compare seroprevalence among cattle within the sample population., Sample Population: Cattle sera from 8 western states and Maryland submitted to the Washington Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory during 1999 and 2000., Procedure: Sera were analyzed for vesivirus-specific antibodies by use of a recombinant vesivirus-San Miguel sea lion virus serotype 5-capsid peptide antigen in an indirect ELISA., Results: Overall, 693 sera were tested and 105 (15.2%) had positive results. Seropositive cattle were from 7 states (all cattle from Montana and Maryland 10 and 4, respectively were seronegative). Overall seroprevalence for antivesivirus antibody in herds ranged between 0% and 80% (median, 14%). Higher antibody prevalence was significantly associated with older age, dairy rather than beef cattle, and reasons for submission. Logistic regression of factors (abortion, respiratory tract disease, and all other reasons for sample submission) revealed that older age and other reasons were independently associated with higher seroprevalence. Higher seropositive optical density values for the ELISA were observed among older cattle and cattle that aborted, compared with values for cattle with respiratory tract disease or other reasons for submission., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: This laboratory-based surveillance sample provided a point estimate of seroprevalence against vesivirus among cattle in 9 US states. This suggests that vesivirus infection is widespread with high prevalence in some herds. Risk factors associated with vesivirus seroprevalence in beef and dairy cattle should be confirmed in population-based studies.
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- 2006
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7. Isolation and characterization of a new Vesivirus from rabbits.
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Martín-Alonso JM, Skilling DE, González-Molleda L, del Barrio G, Machín A, Keefer NK, Matson DO, Iversen PL, Smith AW, and Parra F
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- Animals, Base Sequence, Consensus Sequence, DNA, Viral genetics, Genome, Viral, Molecular Sequence Data, Oligodeoxyribonucleotides chemistry, Open Reading Frames, Phylogeny, RNA, Viral chemistry, Vesivirus classification, Vesivirus genetics, RNA, Viral genetics, Rabbits virology, Vesivirus isolation & purification
- Abstract
This report describes the isolation, cDNA cloning, complete genome nucleotide sequence, and partial characterization of a new cultivable calicivirus isolated from juvenile feeder European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) showing symptoms of diarrhea. Absence of neutralization by type-specific neutralizing antibodies for 40 caliciviruses and phylogenetic sequence comparisons of the open reading frame 1-encoded polyprotein with those of other caliciviruses demonstrate that this new calicivirus is a putative novel member of the Vesivirus genus which is closely related to the marine calicivirus subgroup. According to its putative classification, this new virus has been named rabbit vesivirus.
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- 2005
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8. Infectious disease and the decline of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Alaska, USA: insights from serologic data.
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Burek KA, Gulland FM, Sheffield G, Beckmen KB, Keyes E, Spraker TR, Smith AW, Skilling DE, Evermann JF, Stott JL, Saliki JT, and Trites AW
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- Alaska epidemiology, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Bacterial Infections epidemiology, Bacterial Infections mortality, Cause of Death, Female, Male, Population Density, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Virus Diseases epidemiology, Virus Diseases mortality, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Antibodies, Viral blood, Bacterial Infections veterinary, Sea Lions growth & development, Virus Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Serologic data were examined to determine whether infectious disease may have played a role in the decline of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands, USA. Available published data, unpublished data, and recent collections (1997-2000) were compared and reviewed. Data were stratified by geography to compare the declining western Alaskan population in the Aleutian Islands through eastern Prince William Sound to the increasing population in southeastern Alaska. Prevalences of antibodies from the 1970s to the early 1990s were noted for Leptospira interrogans, Chlamydophila psittaci, Brucella spp., phocid herpesvirus-1, and calciviruses. Serum samples collected from 1997-2000 were tested for antibodies to these agents as well as to marine mammal morbilliviruses, canine parvovirus, and canine adenovirus-1 and -2. Conclusions could not be drawn about changes in antibody prevalence to these agents during the decline of Steller sea lions, however, because data were incomplete or not comparable as a result of inconsistencies in testing techniques. Despite these shortcomings, results provided no convincing evidence of significant exposure of Steller sea lions to morbilliviruses, Brucella spp., canine parvovirus, or L. interrogans. Steller sea lions have been exposed to phocid herpesviruses, caliciviruses, canine adenovirus, and C. psittaci or to cross-reactive organisms in regions of both increasing and decreasing sea lion abundance. Based on similar antibody prevalence estimates from the increasing and decreasing populations, these agents are unlikely to have been the primary cause of the population decline. They may have contributed to the decline or impeded population recovery, however, because of undetected mortality and morbidity or reductions of fecundity and body condition in animals under other stresses. Systematic monitoring for disease agents and their effects is needed to determine whether infectious disease currently plays a role in the decline and lack of recovery of Steller sea lions.
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- 2005
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9. Ice as a reservoir for pathogenic human viruses: specifically, caliciviruses, influenza viruses, and enteroviruses.
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Smith AW, Skilling DE, Castello JD, and Rogers SO
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- Caliciviridae pathogenicity, Cold Climate, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Ecosystem, Enterovirus pathogenicity, Humans, Orthomyxoviridae pathogenicity, Seawater microbiology, Virus Diseases prevention & control, Caliciviridae growth & development, Cryopreservation methods, Disease Reservoirs, Enterovirus growth & development, Ice, Orthomyxoviridae growth & development, Virus Diseases epidemiology, Water Microbiology
- Abstract
Hundreds of isolates of viable bacteria and fungi have been recovered from ancient ice and permafrost. Evidence supports the hypothesis that viral pathogens also are preserved in ice repositories, such as glaciers, ice sheets, and lake ice. Proof may depend upon narrowing the search by applying specific criteria, which would target candidate viruses. Such criteria include viral pathogens likely to occur in great abundance, likely to be readily transported into ice, and then participate in ongoing disease cycles suggestive of their having been deposited in and subsequently released from ice. Caliciviruses, influenza A, and some enteroviruses appear to satisfy all three criteria. Environmental ice appears to be an important abiotic reservoir for pathogenic microbes. World health and eradication of specific pathogens could be affected by this huge reservoir., (Copyright 2004 Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2004
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10. Antisense treatment of caliciviridae: an emerging disease agent of animals and humans.
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Smith AW, Matson DO, Stein DA, Skilling DE, Kroeker AD, Berke T, and Iversen PL
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- Animals, Caliciviridae physiology, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary, Communicable Diseases, Emerging veterinary, Humans, Species Specificity, Caliciviridae Infections drug therapy, Communicable Diseases, Emerging drug therapy, Oligonucleotides, Antisense therapeutic use
- Abstract
The Earth's oceans are the primary reservoir for an emerging family of RNA viruses, the Caliciviridae, which can cause a spectrum of diseases in marine animals, wildlife, farm animals, pets and humans. Certain members of this family have unusually broad host ranges, and some are zoonotic (transmissible from animals to humans). The RNA virus replicative processes lack effective genetic repair mechanisms, and, therefore, virtually every calicivirus replicate is a mutant. Hence, traditional therapeutics dependent on specific nucleic acid sequences or protein epitopes lack the required diversity of sequence or conformational specificity that would be required to reliably detect, prevent or treat infections from these mutant clusters (quasi-species) of RNA viruses, including the Caliciviridae. Antisense technology using phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers shows promise in overcoming these current diagnostic and therapeutic problems inherent with newly emerging viral diseases.
- Published
- 2002
11. Detection of vesicular exanthema of swine-like calicivirus in tissues from a naturally infected spontaneously aborted bovine fetus.
- Author
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Smith AW, Skilling DE, Matson DO, Kroeker AD, Stein DA, Berke T, and Iversen PL
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- Animals, Caliciviridae classification, Caliciviridae genetics, Caliciviridae ultrastructure, Caliciviridae Infections diagnosis, Caliciviridae Infections virology, Cattle, Cattle Diseases virology, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Fetal Diseases diagnosis, Fetal Diseases veterinary, Fetal Diseases virology, Lung embryology, Lung ultrastructure, Lung virology, Microscopy, Electron veterinary, Phylogeny, RNA, Viral chemistry, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary, Sequence Homology, Vesicular Exanthema of Swine diagnosis, Vesicular Exanthema of Swine virology, Vesicular exanthema of swine virus classification, Vesicular exanthema of swine virus isolation & purification, Abortion, Veterinary virology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary, Cattle Diseases diagnosis, Fetus virology
- Published
- 2002
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12. Inhibition of Vesivirus infections in mammalian tissue culture with antisense morpholino oligomers.
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Stein DA, Skilling DE, Iversen PL, and Smith AW
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- Animals, Blotting, Western, Cell Line, Chlorocebus aethiops, Microscopy, Electron, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Open Reading Frames, Protein Biosynthesis, Swine, Vesivirus physiology, Oligonucleotides, Antisense pharmacology, Vesivirus drug effects, Virus Replication drug effects
- Abstract
Caliciviruses infect and cause disease in animals and humans. They are nonenveloped, positive-stranded RNA viruses with a genome of approximately 7.5 kb that encodes viral proteins in three open reading frames (ORF). Antisense oligomers targeting one of the three ORF of caliciviruses of the genus Vesivirus significantly inhibit viral replication in tissue culture. Porcine kidney and African green monkey kidney cells were infected with Vesivirus isolates SMSV-13 and PCV Pan-1. Phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PMO) with sequence complementary to the AUG translation start site regions of ORF1, ORF2, and ORF3 were evaluated for their effect on viral titer. Scrape-loading delivered PMO to 50%-70% of the cells of the two cell lines, as measured by fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. A PMO targeting ORF3 caused a significant increase in viral titer. A PMO targeting ORF2, a scrambled PMO control sequence, and an unrelated PMO antisense sequence did not alter viral titer. Various PMO sequences antisense to an upstream region of ORF1 were effective in reducing viral titer up to 80% in a dose-dependent and sequence-specific manner. The extent of viral titer reduction was proportional to the delivery of PMO to cells. These observations demonstrate that antisense PMO can disrupt caliciviral gene function in a nucleic acid sequence-specific manner and are potentially effective antiviral agents.
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- 2001
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13. Isolation of reptilian calicivirus Crotalus type 1 from feral pinnipeds.
- Author
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Barlough JE, Matson DO, Skilling DE, Berke T, Berry ES, Brown RF, and Smith AW
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- Animals, Antibodies, Viral blood, Anura virology, Caliciviridae immunology, Caliciviridae ultrastructure, Caliciviridae Infections epidemiology, California epidemiology, Mouth virology, Rectum virology, Snakes virology, Animals, Wild virology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary, Seals, Earless virology
- Abstract
Ten virus isolates were obtained from three species of marine mammals sampled on San Miguel Island (California, USA) and 1,200 km north on Rogue Reef (Oregon, USA) during tagging operations in 1986-87. Seven of these 10 were derived from 30 sampled Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus pups, while two of 10 were isolated from one of 19 sampled California sea lion (Zalophus californianus californianus pups, and the remaining isolate was derived from 30 sampled northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) pups. All 10 isolates were identified as belonging to a single serotype, reptilian calicivirus Crotalus type 1 (RCV Cro-1), previously isolated from both healthy and diseased snakes and frogs in a California zoologic collection. The marine samples also showed that nine of 30 Steller sea lion pups, one of 19 California sea lion pups and zero of 30 fur seal pups were producing type specific neutralizing antibodies to RCV Cro-1. This represents the first reported instance of the isolation from marine sources of calicivirus originally isolated from a terrestrial species.
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- 1998
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14. In vitro isolation and characterization of a calicivirus causing a vesicular disease of the hands and feet.
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Smith AW, Berry ES, Skilling DE, Barlough JE, Poet SE, Berke T, Mead J, and Matson DO
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- Adult, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, Caliciviridae Infections immunology, Caliciviridae Infections pathology, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary, DNA, Viral, Foot pathology, Hand pathology, Humans, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Seals, Earless, Caliciviridae Infections virology, Foot virology, Hand virology
- Abstract
We report that a calicivirus of oceanic origin, San Miguel sea lion virus serotype 5 (SMSV-5), is a human pathogen. This biotype was isolated originally from blisters on the flippers of northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) and replicates readily in primate and human cell lines. It infects a phylogenetically diverse array of hosts (poikilotherms to primates) and induces type-specific neutralizing antibodies in exposed humans. Group antibody against a pooled antigen of SMSV-5 and two other serotypes was also observed in 18% of 300 blood donors from a population in the northwestern United States. The human calicivirus isolate designated SMSV-5 Homosapien-1 (SMSV-5 Hom-1) was recovered from a laboratory worker with systemic illness, including vesicular lesions on all four extremities. We believe this newly described human disease represents a paradigmatic shift in calicivirus disease recognition.
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- 1998
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15. Calicivirus emergence from ocean reservoirs: zoonotic and interspecies movements.
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Smith AW, Skilling DE, Cherry N, Mead JH, and Matson DO
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- Animals, Caliciviridae Infections pathology, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary, Caliciviridae Infections virology, Disease Reservoirs, Forecasting, History, 20th Century, Humans, Oceans and Seas, Species Specificity, Caliciviridae Infections transmission, Zoonoses
- Abstract
Caliciviral infections in humans, among the most common causes of viral-induced vomiting and diarrhea, are caused by the Norwalk group of small round structured viruses, the Sapporo caliciviruses, and the hepatitis E agent. Human caliciviruses have been resistant to in vitro cultivation, and direct study of their origins and reservoirs outside infected humans or water and foods (such as shellfish contaminated with human sewage) has been difficult. Modes of transmission, other than direct fecal-oral routes, are not well understood. In contrast, animal viruses found in ocean reservoirs, which make up a second calicivirus group, can be cultivated in vitro. These viruses can emerge and infect terrestrial hosts, including humans. This article reviews the history of animal caliciviruses, their eventual recognition as zoonotic agents, and their potential usefulness as a predictive model for noncultivatable human and other animal caliciviruses (e.g., those seen in association with rabbit hemorrhagic disease).
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- 1998
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16. Detection of a non-cultivatable calicivirus from the white tern (Gygis alba rothschildi).
- Author
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Poet SE, Skilling DE, Megyesl JL, Gilmartin WG, and Smith AW
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- Animals, Birds, Caliciviridae genetics, Caliciviridae ultrastructure, Caliciviridae Infections virology, Cell Line, Chlorocebus aethiops, DNA, Viral analysis, Hawaii, Microscopy, Electron veterinary, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, RNA, Viral analysis, Vero Cells, Bird Diseases virology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caliciviridae Infections veterinary
- Abstract
In April 1992, on Tern Island, French Frigate Shoals, Hawaii (USA), researchers observed a hand-reared white tern hatchling (Gygis alba rothschildi) develop vesicular lesions on the webbing between its toes, 6 days after falling out of its nest. Vesicular fluid collected from the foot lesions contained virus-like particles having typical calicivirus morphology. Calicivirus RNA was detected in the vesicular fluid by dot hybridization with a group-specific calicivirus copy DNA probe. Attempts to cultivate the virus in African green monkey kidney cells and porcine kidney cells were unsuccessful. This is the first report of a calicivirus infection associated with vesicular disease in a wild avian species.
- Published
- 1996
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17. New marine calicivirus serotype infective for swine.
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Berry ES, Skilling DE, Barlough JE, Vedros NA, Gage LJ, and Smith AW
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- Animals, Caliciviridae classification, Caliciviridae pathogenicity, Hindlimb, Male, Picornaviridae Infections epidemiology, Picornaviridae Infections immunology, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, Prevalence, Serotyping veterinary, Swine, Swine Diseases etiology, Virulence, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caniformia microbiology, Disease Outbreaks veterinary, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, Seals, Earless microbiology, Swine Diseases microbiology
- Abstract
A new serotype of calicivirus was isolated from California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) with severe vesicular disease. Neutralizing antibodies were found in 27 of 82 (32.9%) serum samples from California sea lions and in 15 of 146 (10.3%) serum samples from Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) tested. The seropositive animals were widely dispersed along the margins of the eastern Pacific basin, from the Bering Sea to the Santa Barbara Channel. Seropositive samples were found from as early as 1976 through the present time. This new calicivirus serotype, San Miguel sea lion virus type 13, was inoculated into weaned pigs, resulting in induction of severe vesicular disease, which spread to all pigs, including uninoculated pen contacts. Virus was continually shed by most of the pigs throughout the 2-week duration of the experiment.
- Published
- 1990
18. Calicivirus pathogenic for swine: a new serotype isolated from opaleye Girella nigricans, an ocean fish.
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Smith AW, Skilling DE, Dardiri AH, and Latham AB
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- Animals, Antigens, Viral analysis, Caliciviridae classification, Caliciviridae immunology, Serotyping, Swine microbiology, Vesicular Exanthema of Swine microbiology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Disease Reservoirs, Fishes microbiology, Vesicular Exanthema of Swine transmission
- Abstract
A new calicivirus, designated San Miguel sea lion virus type 7 (SMSV-7), was isolated from fish and produced a disease condition identical to vesicular exanthema in experimentally infected swine. Serotype SMSV-7 was also isolated from four elephant seals and one sea lion trematode, whereas a second calicivirus serotype isolated from fish proved to be SMSV-6.
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- 1980
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19. First isolation of a calicivirus from the Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Skilling DE, Barlough JE, Berry ES, Brown RF, and Smith AW
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- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Oregon, Oropharynx microbiology, Rectum microbiology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caniformia microbiology, Sea Lions microbiology
- Abstract
A calicivirus was isolated from the rectum of a Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) pup on Rogue Reef, off the southern Oregon coast. Based on the results of neutralization tests with specific typing antisera, the isolate was identified as San Miguel sea lion virus serotype 6 (SMSV-6). Blood obtained from nine of 37 pups (24%) during virus sample collection procedures had specific neutralizing antibodies to SMSV-6. The isolation of SMSV-6 from a Steller sea lion represents, to our knowledge, the first isolation of any virus from this widely distributed marine mammal species, and serves to reconfirm the host-nonspecificity of yet another calicivirus of marine origin.
- Published
- 1987
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20. Regression of cetacean tattoo lesions concurrent with conversion of precipitin antibody against a poxvirus.
- Author
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Smith AW, Skilling DE, Ridgway SH, and Fenner CA
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- Animals, Biopsy veterinary, Female, Male, Poxviridae Infections immunology, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Dolphins immunology, Poxviridae immunology, Poxviridae Infections veterinary, Precipitins analysis
- Abstract
Tattoo lesions linked to the cetacean poxvirus of bottlenose dolphins regressed without treatment. Two types of regression were observed: (1) The tattoo lesions became raised and blanched, then disappeared along with sloughing skin. (2) When an incision was made through a tattoo lesion, the tattoo disappeared in a zone around the incision. Poxviruses removed from the raised, blanched skin lesions and from typical tattoo lesions were reacted with dolphin serums and examined by immunoelectron microscopy. Antibody was not detected against either of these poxvirus preparations when the dolphins had only typical tattoo lesions. However, after the raised, blanched lesions appeared, serums obtained during the acute or convalescent stages were positive for the poxvirus separated from the lesions. Regression of the typical tattoo lesions was concurrent with antibody conversion.
- Published
- 1983
21. Caliciviruses infecting monkeys and possibly man.
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Smith AW, Prato C, and Skilling DE
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- Animals, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Haplorhini, Humans, Picornaviridae immunology, Zoonoses, Cercopithecus, Chlorocebus aethiops, Monkey Diseases etiology, Virus Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Caliciviruses have, for the 1st time, been shown experimentally to infect a primate. Twenty-four hours after being inoculated with San Miguel sea lion virus (SMSV), an African green monkey developed a febrile response and vesicular lesions at injection sites. Virus was recovered from lesion material 96 hours later and from the stool at 48 hours. Possible human infection with SMSV was indicated by serologic evidence. Three persons working with 4 distinct serotypes of SMSV developed neutralizing antibody titers to 2 SMSV types. The positive serum-neutralization test results were confirmed, using immunoelectron microscopy to demonstrate complexes of viruses and antibodies.
- Published
- 1978
22. Calicivirus isolation and persistence in a pygmy chimpanzee (Pan paniscus).
- Author
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Smith AW, Skilling DE, Ensley PK, Benirschke K, and Lester TL
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- Animals, Antigen-Antibody Complex immunology, Antigens, Viral immunology, Caliciviridae immunology, Caliciviridae ultrastructure, Cats, Cattle, Humans, Microscopy, Electron, Swine, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Hominidae microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology
- Abstract
What may be the first calicivirus isolate from any primate species, including man, was recovered from a herpesvirus-like lip lesion on a pygmy chimpanzee and then, 6 months later, from the throat of the same animal. The infected individual and its cage mates had circulating antibodies that were type-specific for this calicivirus. The agent was antigenically different from 30 other calicivirus serotypes and is tentatively designated primate calicivirus Pan paniscus type 1 (PCV-Pan 1).
- Published
- 1983
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23. Prevalence and distribution of serum neutralizing antibodies to Tillamook (bovine) calicivirus in selected populations of marine mammals.
- Author
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Barlough JE, Berry ES, Smith AW, and Skilling DE
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- Animals, Dolphins, Female, Male, Seals, Earless, Walruses, Whales, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Caliciviridae immunology, Caniformia immunology, Cetacea immunology
- Abstract
Neutralizing antibodies to Tillamook calicivirus (TCV) were found in sera collected from California sea lions (Zalophus c. californianus Lesson) in 1983 and 1984 and in sera collected from Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus Schreber) in 1976 and 1985. The combined prevalence of antibodies for these two species was 10/228 = 4.38%. Titers ranged from 1:20 (five animals), to 1:40 (four animals), to 1:80 (one animal) by standard microtiter neutralization assay. The seropositive pinnipeds were dispersed widely along the margins of the eastern Pacific rim, from the Bering Sea to the Santa Barbara Channel. Antibodies to TCV were not found in sera collected from northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus L.), Pacific walruses (Odobenus rosmarus divergens Illiger), seals of the family Phocidae, or several cetacean species. Tillamook calicivirus was isolated originally in 1981 from dairy calves in Oregon; the finding of neutralizing antibodies in two widely distributed species of sea lions suggests the possibility of a marine origin for this agent.
- Published
- 1987
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24. Viruses and virus diseases of marine mammals.
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Smith AW and Skilling DE
- Subjects
- Adenoviridae isolation & purification, Animals, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Enterovirus isolation & purification, Poxviridae isolation & purification, Virus Diseases etiology, Caniformia microbiology, Cetacea microbiology, Seals, Earless microbiology, Virus Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Poxvirus and several serotypes of calicivirus cause recognizable disease in marine mammals. Pox lesions in pinnipeds are raised and proliferative and are seen most frequently after confinement in captivity. In cetaceans, a poxvirus is associated with a much more benign and chronic lesion called a "tattoo." Numerous caliciviruses of differing antigenic types have been isolated from vesicular lesions and aborted fetuses of northern fur seals and California sea lions as well as from clinically normal and orphaned northern elephant seal pups. An adenovirus has been isolated from a sei whale and an enterovirus has been isolated from a gray whale.
- Published
- 1979
25. Isolation and identification of caliciviruses from dogs with enteric infections.
- Author
-
Evermann JF, McKeirnan AJ, Smith AW, Skilling DE, and Ott RL
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigen-Antibody Complex, Caliciviridae ultrastructure, Dogs, Enteritis microbiology, Female, Male, Microscopy, Electron, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, United States, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Carnivora, Dog Diseases microbiology, Enteritis veterinary, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary
- Abstract
Caliciviruses were isolated from 7 dogs and 1 captured coyote with enteritis. There was a high fatality rate in dogs 4 to 16 weeks of age. The occurrence in these dogs of concurrent infection with known enteric pathogens such as Salmonella sp, canine parvovirus, canine coronavirus, and canine rotavirus did not allow making any conclusions regarding the pathogenicity of this newly recognized calicivirus. The caliciviruses were characterized by electron microscopy and were further identified as being closely related to feline calicivirus by immunoelectron microscopy with specific antibody.
- Published
- 1985
26. Calicivirus-induced vesicular disease in cetaceans and probable interspecies transmission.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Skilling DE, and Ridgway S
- Subjects
- Animals, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caliciviridae pathogenicity, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections transmission, Serotyping veterinary, Skin Diseases, Infectious microbiology, Skin Diseases, Infectious transmission, Caliciviridae classification, Caniformia microbiology, Dolphins microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, Seals, Earless microbiology, Skin microbiology, Skin Diseases, Infectious veterinary
- Abstract
A calicivirus isolated from cetaceans is a new serotype designated cetacean calicivirus Tursiops-1 (CCV-Tur-1). It appears to have spread from an initially infected Atlantic bottlenose dolphin to a California sea lion, and was then carried by the sea lion to a second facility several miles away, where a second dolphin became infected and developed vesicular skin lesions that eroded, leaving shallow ulcers. Cetaceans and pinnipeds belong to separate orders, so this finding of interspecies transmission demonstrates the potentially broad host spectrum for yet another calicivirus.
- Published
- 1983
27. Isolation of San Miguel Sea Lion Virus from Samples of an animal food product produced from northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) carcasses.
- Author
-
Sawyer JC, Madin SH, and Skilling DE
- Subjects
- Animals, Cytopathogenic Effect, Viral, Picornaviridae growth & development, Animal Feed, Caniformia microbiology, Food Microbiology, Picornaviridae isolation & purification, Sea Lions microbiology
- Abstract
A virus was isolated from California sea lions (Zalophus californianus californianus) and northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) in 1972. It was later named San Miguel sea lion virus (SMSV). State and federal livestock disease control agencies became concerned, because SMSV was found to be indistinguishable from vesicular exanthema of swine virus and to cause (in laboratory trials) clinical signs in swine similar to those produced by vesicular exanthema of swine virus. Ground carcasses of northern fur seals, salvaged after harvesting pelts, are fed to mink on ranches in the United States. Domestic swine are kept on some of these same ranches. Samples withheld from lots of this seal carcass mink food were found to contain SMSV (serotype 5) in titers of 10(6.1) and 10(6.8) tissue culture infective doses.
- Published
- 1978
28. Calcivirus (SMSV-5) infection in experimentally inoculated Opaleye fish (Girella nigricans).
- Author
-
Smith AW, Skilling DE, Prato CM, and Bray HL
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Chlorocebus aethiops, Seawater, Spleen microbiology, Water Microbiology, Caliciviridae growth & development, Fish Diseases microbiology, Fishes microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary
- Abstract
At 15 degrees C, San Miguel sea lion virus infected fish (Girella nigricans), producing 10(7).6 TCID50 per gram of spleen, replicated in Vero cells (10(8) TCID50/gm) and retained viability after 14 days exposure to salt water (10(5) TCID50/ml dropped to 10(2).
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. New calicivirus isolates from feces of walrus (Odobenus rosmarus).
- Author
-
Smith AW, Ritter DG, Ray GC, Skilling DE, and Wartzok D
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Caliciviridae classification, Caliciviridae immunology, Feces microbiology, Female, Male, Virus Cultivation, Walruses immunology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caniformia microbiology, Walruses microbiology
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Antibodies to marine caliciviruses in the Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens Illiger).
- Author
-
Barlough JE, Berry ES, Skilling DE, Smith AW, and Fay FH
- Subjects
- Animals, Caliciviridae classification, Disease Reservoirs, Female, Male, Marine Biology, Neutralization Tests, Water Microbiology, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Caliciviridae immunology, Caniformia microbiology, Walruses microbiology
- Abstract
Sera from 155 Pacific walruses (Odobenus rosmarus divergens Illiger), sampled in the Chukchi Sea during the summer of 1983, were tested for serum neutralizing (SN) antibodies to six marine calicivirus serotypes. Serotypes tested included San Miguel sea lion virus (SMSV) types 1, 5, 8, and 10, previously isolated from northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus Linné) in the Bering Sea; walrus calicivirus (WCV), previously isolated from walrus feces collected off sea ice in the Chukchi Sea; and Tillamook calicivirus (TCV), a bovine isolate from Oregon of suspected marine origin. No antibodies were found to SMSV-1, SMSV-10, or TCV. Antibodies to SMSV-5 were found in two animals (titers 1:20 and 1:160); antibodies to SMSV-8 were found in four animals (all 1:20); and antibodies to WCV were found in one animal (titer 1:40). Antibodies to WCV have been found in the Pacific walrus previously; however, this represents the first report of antibodies to any of the SMSV serotypes in this marine mammal.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Serology and virology of the bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus L.).
- Author
-
Smith AW, Skilling DE, Benirschke K, Albert TF, and Barlough JE
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial analysis, Leptospira interrogans immunology, Orthomyxoviridae immunology, Paramyxoviridae immunology, Swine, Vesicular Exanthema of Swine microbiology, Virus Cultivation, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Caliciviridae immunology, Cetacea microbiology, Whales microbiology
- Abstract
Sera from four bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus L.) were examined for the presence of specific antibodies, and tissue and swab samples from six and four animals respectively were processed for isolation of viruses and for initiation of bowhead whale cell cultures. All sera were negative for antibodies to nine serovars of Leptospira interrogans and to 21 orthomyxovirus subtypes and a paramyxovirus (Newcastle disease virus). All sera were positive, however, for neutralizing antibodies to one or more calicivirus serotypes. Two untyped adenoviruses were isolated from colon samples of two different whales, but neutralizing antibodies to the agents could not be demonstrated in any sera. Three primary bowhead whale cell cultures were derived from kidney (two cultures) and testis (one culture), from three individual whales.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. First isolation of calicivirus from reptiles and amphibians.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Anderson MP, Skilling DE, Barlough JE, and Ensley PK
- Subjects
- Animals, Intestine, Small microbiology, Kidney immunology, Liver microbiology, Lymph microbiology, Rectum microbiology, Species Specificity, Spleen microbiology, Anura microbiology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, Snakes microbiology
- Abstract
Calicivirus isolations were made from 4 poikilothermic species in a zoologic collection. Viruses were recovered from 8 asymptomatic Aruba Island rattlesnakes (Crotalus unicolor; rectal swab samples) and from 8 symptomatic animals (4 Aruba Island rattlesnakes, 2 Bell's horned frogs [Ceratophrys orata], 1 rock rattlesnake [C lepidus], and 1 eyelash viper [Bothrops schlegeli] tissue samples obtained at necropsy). On the basis of cross-neutralization test results, the 16 isolates were antigenically indistinguishable and were considered to represent a unique calicivirus serotype, tentatively designated reptilian calicivirus Crotalus type 1. These isolations could not be associated causally with any specific disease entity either in naturally infected poikilotherms or in experimentally infected snakes and pigs.
- Published
- 1986
33. Naturally-occurring leptospirosis in northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus).
- Author
-
Smith AW, Brown RJ, Skilling DE, Bray HL, and Keyes MC
- Subjects
- Animals, Kidney microbiology, Kidney pathology, Leptospira isolation & purification, Leptospirosis microbiology, Leptospirosis pathology, Liver microbiology, Liver pathology, Caniformia, Fur Seals, Leptospirosis veterinary
- Abstract
A 4-year study of Northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) leptospirosis in the Bering Sea has shown that in newborn pups Leptospira pomona is associated with a multiple hemorrhage syndrome. Adults may develop an interstitial nephritis and shed organisms in the urine. The hed prevalence, based on microscopic slide agglutination tests, ranged between 7.0% and 15.4% for adult females and 3-4 year old bachelor bulls, whereas nursing pups averaging 4 months of age had a prevalence of 2%. These results are used to conclude that leptospirosis is not acquired primarily on the breeding rookeries but rather is more frequently acquired subsequent to the purps leaving the rookeries, presumably through the food chain during their first pelagic cycle.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Preliminary investigation of a possible lung worm (Parafilaroides decorus), fish (Girella nigricans), and marine mammal (Callorhinus ursinus) cycle for San Miguel sea lion virus type 5.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Skilling DE, and Brown RJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Fish Diseases transmission, Nematode Infections microbiology, Nematode Infections transmission, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections transmission, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caniformia microbiology, Fishes microbiology, Metastrongyloidea microbiology, Nematode Infections veterinary, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, Sea Lions microbiology
- Abstract
Colostrum-deprived neonatal Northern fur seal pups (Callorhinus ursinus) were exposed to San Miguel sea lion virus type 5 (SMSV-5) by feeding them fish (Girella nigricans) infected with virus or fish infected with both the sea lion lung worm larvae (Parafilaroides decorus) and virus. Virus infection was demonstrated in 8 of 9 pups, and 1 of these developed a vesicular lesion on the flipper. In this sequence, P decorus larvae exposed to SMSV-5 were fed to G nigricans held at 15 C in a salt water aquarium; 32 days later, these fish were killed, then fed to the fur seal pups. The vesicle developed 22 days subsequent to this and SMSV-5 was reisolated from the lesion. The SMSV-5 was shown to persist for at least 23 days in infected neonatal fur seals. Attempts to establish P decorus infection in Northern fur seal pups were apparently unsuccessful.
- Published
- 1980
35. Ultrastructure of newly recognized caliciviruses of the dog and mink.
- Author
-
Evermann JF, Smith AW, Skilling DE, and McKeirnan AJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Dogs, Glossitis microbiology, Glossitis veterinary, Microscopy, Electron, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, Pneumonia microbiology, Pneumonia veterinary, Caliciviridae ultrastructure, Dog Diseases microbiology, Mink microbiology
- Abstract
Two recently recognized viruses obtained from a dog with glossitis and from mink with hemorrhagic pneumonia were characterized by electron microscopy. The results of the negative-stained preparations indicated that the viruses were structurally compatible with the calicivirus group.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Isolation and identification of five new serotypes of calicivirus from marine mammals.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Skilling DE, and Latham AB
- Subjects
- Animals, Caliciviridae classification, Serotyping veterinary, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caniformia microbiology, Seals, Earless microbiology
- Abstract
Five new serotypes of calicivirus have been isolated from marine mammals. San Miguel sea lion virus (SMSV)-8 and SMSV-10 were recovered from vesicular lesions on the flippers of northern fur seals in the Pribilof Islands of Alaska. Serotype SMSV-9 was isolated from a sea lion in southern California, and SMSV-11 was isolated from 2 northern fur seal pups in southern California. Serotype SMSV-12 was also isolated in southern California from sea lion and fur seal pups.
- Published
- 1981
37. Isolation of primate calicivirus Pan paniscus type 1 from a douc langur (Pygathrix nemaeus l.).
- Author
-
Smith AW, Skilling DE, Anderson MP, and Benirschke K
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Zoo, Male, Monkey Diseases microbiology, Monkey Diseases pathology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Cercopithecidae microbiology
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Mortality of harbor seal pups at different sites in the inland waters of Washington.
- Author
-
Steiger GH, Calambokidis J, Cubbage JC, Skilling DE, Smith AW, and Gribble DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cause of Death, Washington, Animals, Newborn microbiology, Caniformia microbiology, Mortality, Seals, Earless microbiology
- Abstract
We examined the mortality rates and causes of death of harbor seal (Phoca vitulina) pups in three regions of the inland waters of Washington (USA) in 1984. One hundred eight pups were collected during 239 searches of the shoreline areas near harbor seal haulout sites or through public reports. Minimum neonatal (up to 1 mo after birth) mortality rates at these regions ranged from 12% to 26% of the pups born. Neonatal mortality was highest in the Strait of Juan de Fuca; 33 of the estimated 105 (31%) pups born at the primary site died. Causes of death varied by location. In southern Puget Sound predation by coyotes (Canis latrans) was the primary cause of death, accounting for eight of 43 (19%) of the dead pups examined; starvation was the next most common cause of death. Mortality at study sites in the Strait of Juan de Fuca was related to premature parturition; 19 of 49 (39%) of the pups found dead were born prematurely. Nine species of bacteria were identified in samples taken from 42 pups; Proteus sp. and Escherichia coli were the most common.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Characterization of two new serotypes of San Miguel sea lion virus.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Prato CM, and Skilling DE
- Subjects
- Alaska, Animals, Antigens, Viral analysis, California, Cell Line, Epitopes, Neutralization Tests, Virus Replication, Caniformia microbiology, Picornaviridae growth & development, Picornaviridae immunology, Picornaviridae isolation & purification, Sea Lions microbiology
- Abstract
Two new virus isolates, one from a California sea lion (Zalophus californianus californianus) and the other from a northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) were partially characterized. Their physicochemical characteristics were similar to those of vesicular exanthema of swine virus (VESV) and San Miguel sea lion virus (SMSV). The virion morphology was in both instances typically calicivirus. On the basis of this and the serum cross-neutralization testing, these isolates were classed as two new types of SMSV and were designated serotypes SMSV-4 and SMSV-5.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Leptospira pomona and reproductive failure in California sea lions.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Brown RJ, Skilling DE, and DeLong RL
- Subjects
- Abortion, Veterinary immunology, Abortion, Veterinary microbiology, Agglutination Tests, Animals, California, Fatty Liver veterinary, Female, Fetal Death etiology, Fetal Death microbiology, Fetal Death veterinary, Fetal Diseases etiology, Fetal Diseases microbiology, Fetal Diseases veterinary, Hemorrhage veterinary, Kidney microbiology, Leptospira isolation & purification, Leptospirosis etiology, Leptospirosis immunology, Leptospirosis microbiology, Liver microbiology, Nephritis, Interstitial microbiology, Nephritis, Interstitial veterinary, Placenta microbiology, Pregnancy, Abortion, Veterinary etiology, Caniformia, Leptospirosis veterinary
- Published
- 1974
41. Isolation and partial characterization of a calicivirus from calves.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Mattson DE, Skilling DE, and Schmitz JA
- Subjects
- Animals, Caliciviridae classification, Caliciviridae pathogenicity, Cattle, Female, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, Seawater, Serotyping veterinary, Swine, Vesicular Exanthema of Swine microbiology, Water Microbiology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Cattle Diseases microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, Swine Diseases microbiology
- Abstract
A calicivirus was isolated from 3 dairy calves in a herd with persistent calf respiratory tract problems. This virus, named Tillamook calicivirus, was not neutralized by 18 different calicivirus-typing serums available. The agent caused only minimal lesions in 2 experimentally exposed calves, but did establish a persistent infection with virus shedding for 45 days, after which time the experiment was terminated. Experimentally exposed swine developed clinical vesicular lesions. The possible origins, disease potential, and relationships to the exotic animal disease agent, vesicular exanthema of swine are discussed for this first calicivirus isolate of bovine origin.
- Published
- 1983
42. Immunoelectron microscopic comparisons of caliciviruses.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Skilling DE, and Ritchie AE
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigen-Antibody Complex, Antigens, Viral analysis, Caliciviridae ultrastructure, Caniformia microbiology, Microscopy, Electron, Swine, Vesicular Exanthema of Swine microbiology, Caliciviridae immunology
- Abstract
Using immunoelectron microscopy, 9 serotypes of vesicular exanthema of swine virus (VESV) were compared with 5 serotypes of San Miguel sea lion virus and 7 additional calicivirus isolates from marine animals. In addition, swine caliciviruses and marine caliciviruses were compared with the vaccinal strain of feline calicivirus (FCV) F-9. Of 9 VESV types, 8 showed common antigenicity with San Miguel sea lion virus. Of 9 VESV types, 2 showed common antigenicity with FCV F-9. All 12 marine caliciviruses showed common antigenicity with VESV, but not with FCV F-9.
- Published
- 1978
43. A simple, rapid method for preparation of virus isolates from cell culture for electron microscopy.
- Author
-
Skilling DE, Barlough JE, Berry ES, and Smith AW
- Abstract
A simple procedure for the rapid preparation of virus isolates from cell culture for negative-contrast electron microscopy was devised. Using only conventional centrifugation steps (i.e. without ultracentrifugation), the procedure produced consistent, fine-quality preparations of a variety of virus types differing in size/shape and buoyant density., (© Tissue Culture Association, Inc. 1986.)
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A new calicivirus isolated from a marine mammal.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Akers TG, Latham AB, Skilling DE, and Bray HL
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Antigens, Viral analysis, Caliciviridae classification, Caliciviridae immunology, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caniformia microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, Seals, Earless microbiology
- Abstract
A new serotype of calicivirus, designated as San Miguel sea lion virus type 6 (SMSV-6), was isolated from vesicular lesions on the flipper of a California sea lion pup. Serologic studies show that SMSV-6 neutralizing antibodies (SN) occur frequently among California sea lions and occasionally among northern fur seals. Feral swine, 1- to 6-week elephant seal pups and grey whales tested negative for SMSV-6 antibody.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Calicivirus isolation from three species of primates: an incidental finding.
- Author
-
Smith AW, Skilling DE, and Benirschke K
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Monkey Diseases microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Cebidae microbiology, Cercopithecidae microbiology, Gorilla gorilla microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary
- Abstract
Calicivirus isolations were made from 3 species of subhuman primates. Viruses were recovered from gingival lesions associated with periodontal disease in a spider monkey, from the oropharynx of a healthy silver leaf langur, and from the spleen of a lowland gorilla that had died of systemic coccidioidomycosis. Based on the results of cross-neutralization tests, all 3 isolates were serologically indistinguishable from a primate calicivirus Pan paniscus type 1. These isolations appeared to be incidental in nature and could not be associated causally with any specific disease entity.
- Published
- 1985
46. Characterization of a new calicivirus isolated from feces of a dog.
- Author
-
Schaffer FL, Soergel ME, Black JW, Skilling DE, Smith AW, and Cubitt WD
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Antigens, Viral immunology, Caliciviridae analysis, Caliciviridae isolation & purification, Caliciviridae physiology, Caliciviridae ultrastructure, Cell Line, Cross Reactions, Cytopathogenic Effect, Viral, Diarrhea microbiology, Diarrhea veterinary, Dog Diseases microbiology, Dolphins, Picornaviridae Infections microbiology, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, RNA, Viral analysis, Serotyping, Caliciviridae classification, Dogs microbiology, Feces microbiology
- Abstract
Canine calicivirus (CaCV), isolated from feces of a dog with diarrhea, was readily propagated in cultures of canine cells and in a dolphin cell line. Serologic evidence indicated many dogs in at least one geographic area had been infected with CaCV, but its role as an etiologic agent of disease was not established. In cell culture most CaCV virions were strongly cell-associated making purification difficult. CaCV was established as a member of the Caliciviridae by morphology and physicochemical properties of virions (density, sedimentation rate, single major polypeptide, RNA genome size), although some of the properties differed slightly from those of previously described caliciviruses; evidence was also obtained for caliciviral RNA species in infected cells. Based on tests with antisera to numerous caliciviruses and presumed caliciviruses, CaCV appeared to be not closely related to any previously described virus except the stunting syndrome agent of chickens.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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