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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Insights into pathological and molecular characterization of avipoxviruses circulating in Egypt.

Journal:
British poultry science
Year:
2019
Authors:
Lebdah, M et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Avian and Rabbit Medicine
Species:
bird

Abstract

1. Avipoxvirus (APV) infections are one of many threats inflicting economic losses within the poultry industry, particularly in tropical and subtropical countries. A proper and comprehensive study for APVs is needed to increase the knowledge concerning the diversity and evolution of the virus.2. For this purpose, 136 bird flocks of different species and breeding types were examined for APV infection between October 2016 and November 2017. One hundred and thirty samples had visible pocks on the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) which were designated as fowl pox-like virusesamplification of 578 bp from thegene and 1800 bp from the fpv140 locus.4. A comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of fpv167 locus (), fpv140 locus (fpv139 and fpv140) and fpv94 (DNA polymerase) revealed that all the analysed strains belong to fowl pox-like viruses (clade A; subclade A1 and A2). Based on the fpv140 locus full nucleotide sequence, three turkey originated strains were seen to be divergent from chicken originated sequences and branched into novel subclade A1.b.5. Trees comparison, within the term of speculation of virus-host specificity, clearly highlighted a high order specific subgrouping among subclades in the case of the fpv140 locus (including fpv139 and fpv140). Hence, the fowl poxvirus, turkey poxvirus and pigeon poxvirus strains clustered into distinct host-specific subclades A1a, A1.b and A2, respectively, which could not be seen in the FWPV-and DNA polymerase phylogeny.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31298555/