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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Effect of host selective pressure on Newcastle disease virus virulence.

Journal:
Microbial pathogenesis
Year:
2008
Authors:
Zanetti, Flavia et al.
Affiliation:
Instituto de Biotecnolog&#xed
Species:
bird

Abstract

Newcastle disease virus (NDV) causes an economically important disease that can vary from clinically inapparent to highly virulent forms. Generally, NDV strains isolated from wild birds are non-pathogenic for chicken. However, there are evidences supporting the fact that avirulent viruses maintained in feral birds could have caused outbreaks of virulent NDV in poultry. The strain-specific difference in virulence is determined by structural variations on the fusion glycoprotein (F). More basic amino acids are present in the F cleavage site of virulent strains. Nevertheless, other regions have been involved in virulence determination. When we subjected an avirulent NDV isolated from a wild bird to a host change we found that the virus arose was virulent for chicken. Nucleotide changes in the F protein cleavage site amino acid sequence and in the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase protein sequence are reported.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17900851/