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Topic:Virus

The study of viral infections that affect equine species assesses the relationship between viruses and horses. Infections can lead to a range of clinical symptoms and may impact the health and performance of horses. Common equine viruses include Equine Influenza Virus, Equine Herpesvirus, and West Nile Virus, among others. Understanding the mechanisms of viral transmission, pathogenesis, and host immune responses is essential for developing effective prevention and treatment strategies. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the epidemiology, molecular biology, and clinical management of viral infections in horses.
Pattern of transcription of the genome of equine infectious anemia virus.
Journal of virology    April 1, 1990   Volume 64, Issue 4 1839-1843 doi: 10.1128/JVI.64.4.1839-1843.1990
Noiman S, Yaniv A, Sherman L, Tronick SR, Gazit A.The pattern of expression of the equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) genome in a persistently infected canine cell line was determined. Five EIAV-specific transcripts (8.2, 5.0, 4.0, 2, and 1.8 kilobases [kb]) were detected by using subgenomic restriction enzyme fragments of EIAV DNA and EIAV-specific oligonucleotides as probes. The 8.2-kb mRNA could be shown to represent viral genomic RNA, whereas the smaller transcripts were generated by splicing events. Evidence was obtained that indicated that each subgenomic RNA species shared a common 5'-splice donor. The 5.0-kb mRNA was found to be ex...
[Influenza or equine herpes virus (EHV)?].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    March 15, 1990   Volume 115, Issue 6 272 
van Maanen C, Binkhorst GJ.No abstract available
Distribution of neutralizing antibodies to California and Bunyamwera serogroup viruses in horses and rodents in California.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    March 1, 1990   Volume 42, Issue 3 282-290 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1990.42.282
Campbell GL, Reeves WC, Hardy JL, Eldridge BF.Neutralization tests were done on sera from 141 horses from high elevation regions of California. Antibody prevalences to Jamestown Canyon, snowshoe hare, and California encephalitis viruses in the California serogroup and Northway virus in the Bunyamwera serogroup were 55%, 43%, 18%, and 46%, respectively. In 51 horses from rural low elevation regions, seroprevalences were 31%, 35%, 35%, and 37%, respectively. Twenty-four horses from a suburban lowland area were seronegative, except for a single horse with a low titer to snowshoe hare virus. Seroprevalence to Jamestown Canyon and snowshoe har...
One way protection between equid herpesvirus 1 and 4 in vivo.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1990   Volume 48, Issue 2 235-239 
Edington N, Bridges CG.Two groups each of six sibling ponies were exposed to sequential infections with equid herpesvirus 1 or 4 (EHV-1 or EHV-4) at four or five month intervals. Two exposures to EHV-4 did not significantly reduce virus shedding or pyrexia when the ponies were subsequently exposed to EHV-1. However, two sequential infections with EHV-1 completely protected against challenge with EHV-4. Virus neutralising antibody in each group did not increase until 21 days after primary exposure and was subtype specific. However, complement fixing antibody rose within seven days after inoculation with EHV-1, and 14...
Intracellular proteins of feline immunodeficiency virus and their antigenic relationship with equine infectious anaemia virus proteins.
The Journal of general virology    March 1, 1990   Volume 71 ( Pt 3) 739-743 doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-71-3-739
Egberink HF, Ederveen J, Montelaro RC, Pedersen NC, Horzinek MC, Koolen MJ.Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) grown in cat lymphocyte and thymocyte cultures was labelled with L-[35S]methionine or [3H]glucosamine and virus-coded proteins were identified using immunoprecipitation. Polypeptides with apparent Mr values of 15K, 24K, 43K, 50K, 120K and 160K were detected. An additional polypeptide of 10K was detected by Western blot analysis. The two highest Mr species sometimes appeared as one band, of which only the 120K polypeptide was glycosylated. In the presence of tunicamycin gp120 was no longer detectable and a non-glycosylated precursor of 75K was found instead. ...
Induction of immune response and protection from equine viral arteritis (EVA) by formalin inactivated-virus vaccine for EVA in horses.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    March 1, 1990   Volume 37, Issue 2 135-141 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1990.tb01036.x
Fukunaga Y, Wada R, Matsumura T, Sugiura T, Imagawa H.Thirty-nine horses included 3 pregnant mares were examined by inoculating with formalin inactivated-virus vaccine for EVA. Antibody response of horses after one dose vaccination was somewhat poor and 50% effective inoculum dose of the vaccine should be included 10(8.4) pfu of virus before inactivation. After 2 doses given at an interval of 4 weeks, the horses developed such high titer of SN antibody as up to 1:5,120. The SN titer declined rather rapidly, but supplemental administration of the vaccine at an interval of more than 2 months elicited a prompt antibody response and SN titers persist...
Experimental infection of ponies with equine influenza (H3N8) viruses by intranasal inoculation or exposure to aerosols.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 93-98 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04217.x
Mumford JA, Hannant D, Jessett DM.Infection of seronegative Welsh mountain ponies was established by intranasal instillation or exposure to nebulised aerosol of egg grown H3N8 viruses. Pyrexia and coughing were noted following intranasal instillation and high titres of virus were recovered from the nasopharynx. Exposure to aerosol resulted in more severe clinical signs characterised by high temperatures, dyspnoea, anorexia and coughing; lower levels of virus were recovered from the nasopharynx. The severity of clinical signs and the kinetics of virus shedding were dose-related with the minimal infectious dose being 10(2)EID50/...
Three-dimensional structures of maturable and abortive capsids of equine herpesvirus 1 from cryoelectron microscopy.
Journal of virology    February 1, 1990   Volume 64, Issue 2 563-573 doi: 10.1128/JVI.64.2.563-573.1990
Baker TS, Newcomb WW, Booy FP, Brown JC, Steven AC.Cryoelectron microscopy and three-dimensional computer reconstruction techniques have been used to compare the structures of two types of DNA-free capsids of equine herpesvirus 1 at a resolution of 4.5 nm. "Light" capsids are abortive, whereas "intermediate" capsids are related to maturable intracellular precursors. Their T = 16 icosahedral outer shells, approximately 125 nm in diameter, are indistinguishable and may be described in terms of three layers of density, totalling 15 nm in thickness. The outermost layer consists of protruding portions of both the hexon and the penton capsomers, ris...
Suppression of lymphocyte reactivity by culture supernatant from horse embryos and endometrium.
Biology of reproduction    February 1, 1990   Volume 42, Issue 2 294-300 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod42.2.294
Watson ED.The mechanisms that permit maternal tolerance of the conceptus allograft during early pregnancy in the mare have not been investigated. Embryos and endometria were collected from mares 14 days after ovulation and cultured for 20.5 h. The effect of addition of culture supernatant on incorporation of [3H]thymidine by equine peripheral blood lymphocytes was studied. Culture supernatant from endometrium of nonpregnant mares did not affect lymphocyte blastogenesis, but supernatant from both embryos and endometrium of pregnant mares reduced concanavalin A (Con A)- and phytohemagglutinin-induced blas...
[Current information on the subject of African horse sickness (AHS)].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1990   Volume 132, Issue 4 205-210 
Kihm U, Ackermann M.The objective of the present review was to summarize current knowledge of African horse sickness (AHS), based on available literature (which is nonetheless relatively scant) and recent information obtained from the O.I.E. Brief description is made of the biology of AHS virus (an arbovirus, transmitted by Culicoides imicola), isolation of the agent, diagnosis by serotyping procedures, and preventive measures (such as protection of horses from insect infestation, or vaccination programs) which may be taken. The recent outbreaks in Spain, Portugal, and Morocco, have demonstrated that much more re...
[A rapid isolation of Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus using the lanthanide immunofluorescence assay].
Voprosy virusologii    January 1, 1990   Volume 35, Issue 1 77-79 
Kharitonenkov IG, Gaĭdamovich SIa, Pomelova VG, Sokolova MV, Lavrova NA, Leonov SV, Zlobin VN.No abstract available
[New types of virus infections of domestic animals in the German Democratic Republic. 1. Serologic survey studies of the distribution of equine torovirus infections in the GDR].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    January 1, 1990   Volume 44, Issue 2 251-253 
Liebermann H.Sera collected from 124 horses were checked by means of the serum neutralisation test against equine Bern virus. Torovirusspecific antibodies were recordable from 35 percent of all horses tested. These results are likely to suggest that toroviruses are widespread in the GDR and occur not only in horses but in other domestic animals and in man, as well.
Temperature sensitivity of equine herpesvirus isolates: a brief review.
SAAS bulletin, biochemistry and biotechnology    January 1, 1990   Volume 3 124-128 
Jacob RJ, Price R, Bouchey D, Davis T, Borchelt J.This article reviews the findings on temperature sensitivity of equine herpesvirus isolates with an emphasis on equine herpesvirus 3, etiological agent of equine coital exanthema. The hypothesis is presented that the relative apathogenic nature of this herpesvirus may be an indirect result of its inability to synthesize and/or process glycoproteins needed by the virus to produce infectious virions at the normal body temperature of its natural host. It is suggested that equine herpesvirus 3 is the more evolved and naturally attenuated member of the equine herpesviruses.
Detection of African horsesickness (AHS) in recently vaccinated horses with inactivated vaccine in Qatar.
Revue d'elevage et de medecine veterinaire des pays tropicaux    January 1, 1990   Volume 43, Issue 1 33-35 
Hassanain MM, al-Afaleq AI, Soliman IM, Abdullah SK.Two 7-year old Arabian racing horses were reported to show typical AHS symptoms in Qatar and died shortly after. The horses had been vaccinated with formol inactivated vaccine approximately 10 days before the onset of the disease. Blood samples from these horses were collected and AHS virus isolated from one sample after intracerebral (i.c.) inoculation into suckling mice. The virus identity was confirmed by complement fixation test (CFT) using the virus antigen and reference type 9 of AHS virus hyperimmune serum. The serotype of the isolated virus was identified by serum neutralization test (...
Laboratory diagnosis of African horse sickness: comparison of serological techniques and evaluation of storage methods of samples for virus isolation. House C, Mikiciuk PE, Berninger ML.Five serological methods of diagnosing African horse sickness were evaluated, using a battery of serum samples from experimental horses vaccinated and challenged with each serotype of African horse sickness virus (AHSV1 through AHSV9): agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID), indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA), complement fixation (CF), virus neutralization (VN), and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The 5 tests were also compared using a panel of field samples, convalescent equine sera with antibodies to domestic equine viral diseases, and sera from horses awaiting export. The ELISA describ...
Equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) humoral responses of recipient ponies and antigenic variation during persistent infection.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1990   Volume 111, Issue 3-4 199-212 doi: 10.1007/BF01311054
Rwambo PM, Issel CJ, Adams WV, Hussain KA, Miller M, Montelaro RC.Three ponies were inoculated with plasma containing 10(4.8) TCID50 of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) and observed for 165 to 440 days. Each pony developed a febrile response within 3 weeks of infection during which a plasma viremia greater than or equal to 10(3.5) TCID50/ml was observed. Analyses of four isolates from sequential febrile episodes in a single pony were conducted by two-dimensional tryptic peptide maps and with monoclonal antibodies in immunoblots. Structural and antigenic alterations were observed in the envelope glycoproteins gp90 and gp45, with greatest variation in gp9...
In vitro isolation of a neutralization escape mutant of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV).
Archives of virology    January 1, 1990   Volume 111, Issue 3-4 275-280 doi: 10.1007/BF01311062
Rwambo PM, Issel CJ, Hussain KA, Montelaro RC.A neutralization escape mutant (A/1 E) of equine infectious anemia virus was isolated after 13 passages in cell culture in the presence of serum containing antibodies to type- and group-specific determinants of EIAV envelope glycoproteins. Loss of neutralization by the selecting serum correlated with loss of two epitopes in the major envelope glycoprotein gp90 of A/1 E which were present in a parallel variant isolated from a persistently infected pony.
Immunopathogenesis of equine infectious anemia lentivirus disease.
Developments in biological standardization    January 1, 1990   Volume 72 31-37 
McGuire TC, O'Rourke KI, Perryman LE.Virus replication and subsequent viremia are clearly correlated with clinical disease in EIAV infected horses. Termination of viremia is the result of specific immune responses. Recurrences of viremia are associated with antigenic variation of neutralization-sensitive epitopes. Immunosuppression experiments indicate that the eventual control of EIAV and development of carriers is mediated by the immune system. Even though the immune response to EIAV has a protective effect, immune responses also cause some of the lesions. At least one part of the anemia, erythrocyte destruction, is caused by t...
Comparative features of retroviral infections of livestock.
Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases    January 1, 1990   Volume 13, Issue 3 127-136 doi: 10.1016/0147-9571(90)90275-x
Evermann JF.Retroviral infections of livestock have become of increasing importance due to their usefulness as comparative models for human retroviral infections and their effects upon animal health and marketability of animals and animal products nationally and internationally. This paper presents a perspective on the retroviruses of economic concern in veterinary medicine with emphasis on the importance of understanding the modes of virus transmission and the species specificity of the viruses. The retroviruses reviewed include the oncovirus, bovine leukosis virus, and the lentiviruses, equine infectiou...
Equine infectious anemia: prospects for control.
Developments in biological standardization    January 1, 1990   Volume 72 49-57 
Issel CJ, McManus JM, Hagius SD, Foil LD, Adams WV, Montelaro RC.Equine infectious anemia has been managed in most countries by the imposition of testing and quarantine regulations. In the United States, about 700,000 of the more than 7,000,000 horses are tested annually. As long as the status of greater than 90% of the horse population remains unknown and horses are transported and congregate in a relatively unrestricted manner, EIA will continue to exact its toll. Therefore, it is incumbent on the scientific community to continue to develop and refine practical and sensitive diagnostic tests for EIA which will be used in an expanding market, to reduce the...
[Antibodies against Venezuelan equine encephalitis in the human population of the Mara district of the state of Zulia, Venezuela].
Investigacion clinica    January 1, 1990   Volume 31, Issue 2 83-89 
Ryder S, Bracho D.Antibodies against Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis Virus (VEEV) were studied in the human population of Mara District, Zulia State, Venezuela. Two hundred thirty nine blood samples were taken from the towns of San Rafael de Mara, Santa Cruz de Mara, La Sierrita-4 Bocas, Carrasquero, Isla de San Carlos e Isla de Toas, during june, july and september, 1988. Donors samples were classified by age, sex and serological titres. Eighty nine were less than 15 years old (37.2%) and 150, over 15 years old (62.7%). From the 239 samples, 224 were negative (93.7%) and 15 positive (6.3%). Our results indicate...
Structure and expression of the equine infectious anemia virus transcriptional trans-activator (tat).
Developments in biological standardization    January 1, 1990   Volume 72 39-48 
Derse D, Dorn P, DaSilva L, Martarano L.Equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) encodes a tat gene which is closely related to the trans-activators encoded by the human and simian immunodeficiency viruses. Nucleotide sequence analysis of EIAV cDNA clones revealed that the tat message is composed of three exons; the first two encode tat and the third may encode rev.. Interestingly, EIAV tat translation is initiated at a non-AUG codon in the first exon of the message, perhaps allowing an additional level of gene regulation. The deduced amino acid sequence of EIAV tat, combined with functional analyses of tat cDNAs in transfected cells, ...
Equine influenza.
The Veterinary record    December 23, 1989   Volume 125, Issue 26-27 656 
Mumford JA.No abstract available
Equine coital exanthema (EHV-3 virus) infection in India.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    December 1, 1989   Volume 36, Issue 10 786-788 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1989.tb00674.x
Uppal PK, Yadav MP, Singh BK, Prasad S.A progenital disease encountered at one equine stud farm at Bangalore in Southern India during 1987 was investigated and confirmed as equine coital exanthema on the basis of characteristic lesions and clinical symptoms, isolation of equine herpes virus-3 (EHV-3) from the scabs collected from animals having active lesions and demonstration of neutralizing antibodies in the sera of recovered mares and stallion. This is the first authenticated report of the occurrence of equine coital exanthema in India due to EHV-3.
[Electron microscopic detection rate of enteral viruses in diarrhea of dogs, cats, calves, swine and foals in the year 1988–electron microscopic study results].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 1, 1989   Volume 102, Issue 12 412-414 
Biermann U, Herbst W, Krauss H, Schliesser T.During 1988 fecal and gut samples of 641 dogs, 198 cats, 576 calves, 108 piglets and 64 foals with diarrhoea were investigated for virus infections by electron microscopy. In samples of dogs and cats parvovirus was detected at a proportion of 21.9% and 16.7%, respectively; rotavirus alone or together with coronavirus was found only in 0.3-1.5% of the specimens. In samples of calves rotavirus, as well as coronavirus dominated with a detection rate amounting to 17.4% and 26.6% respectively (including 4.5% of mixed infections); parvovirus was present in a ratio of 0.5%. Specimens of piglets mainl...
A brief review of studies of bovine and equine herpesviruses.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 1989   Volume 66, Issue 12 401-402 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1989.tb13558.x
Studdert MJ.No abstract available
Neonatal viral diarrhoeas.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 1989   Volume 66, Issue 12 407-408 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1989.tb13561.x
Caple IW.Diarrhoea continues to be one of the more common and important causes of economic loss in young animals (Anon 1978). Virus particles identified as rotaviruses, coronaviruses, calci-like viruses, astroviruses, parvoviruses, and several others have been detected by direct electron microscopy of ultracen- trifuged samples of diarrhoeic faeces from young animals and human infants over the past 20 years. Despite numerous stud- ies on the many aetiological agents associated with neonatal viral diarrhoea in recent years (Tzipori 1985), the challenge for today’s new veterinary graduate is s...
Viral DNA in horses infected with equine infectious anemia virus.
Journal of virology    December 1, 1989   Volume 63, Issue 12 5194-5200 doi: 10.1128/JVI.63.12.5194-5200.1989
Rice NR, Lequarre AS, Casey JW, Lahn S, Stephens RM, Edwards J.The amount and distribution of viral DNA were established in a horse acutely infected with the Wyoming strain of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV). The highest concentration of viral DNA were found in the liver, lymph nodes, bone marrow, and spleen. The kidney, choroid plexus, and peripheral blood leukocytes also contained viral DNA, but at a lower level. It is estimated that at day 16 postinoculation, almost all of the viral DNA was located in the tissues, with the liver alone containing about 90 times more EIAV DNA than the peripheral blood leukocytes did. Assuming a monocyte-macrophage ...
Cross-neutralizing and subclass characteristics of antibody from horses with equine infectious anemia virus.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    November 30, 1989   Volume 23, Issue 1-2 41-49 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(89)90108-6
O'Rourke KI, Perryman LE, McGuire TC.Antibody responses in horses with equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) were examined to determine their cross-neutralizing capacity. Antibodies induced by infection with any of six biologically cloned variants of EIAV cross-neutralized multiple variants from the group. Anti-EIAV antibody was found in both the IgG and IgG(T) subclasses in plasmas with virus-neutralizing activity and the majority of antiviral antibody was of the IgG(T) subclass. Depletion of IgG(T) did not increase the neutralization indexes of either neutralizing or non-neutralizing plasma samples.
Molecular confirmation of an abortigenic strain of equine herpesvirus 1 (subtype 1) in a pregnant mare study.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1989   Volume 79, Issue 4 363-371 
Martens JG, Martens RJ, Crandell RA, McConnell S, Kit S.Four pregnant mares were inoculated intranasally and/or intravenously with equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1), subtype 1 during the third trimester of gestation. One mare aborted on postinfection day 15, one mare delivered a sick, weak full term foal, and two mares delivered healthy, full term foals. EHV-1, subtype 1 was isolated from several tissues of the aborted fetus and from the thymus of the sick foal. DNA restriction endonuclease patterns of the recovered EHV-1 viruses were identical to those of the EHV-1 challenge strain, documenting the origin of the abortigenic viruses.