Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
1 April 2001 TWO NOVEL ALPHAHERPESVIRUSES ASSOCIATED WITH FATAL DISSEMINATED INFECTIONS IN ATLANTIC BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS
Terrell W. Blanchard, Nancy T. Santiago, Thomas P. Lipscomb, Richard L. Garber, Wayne E. McFee, Susan Knowles
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Two immature female bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) were found stranded on the Atlantic coast of the USA. Necropsy and histopathologic examination of both dolphins demonstrated acute necrotizing lesions in multiple organ systems. Commonly seen in these lesions were cells with enlarged nuclei that contained single 4 to 6 μm diameter homogeneous eosinophilic inclusion bodies that were often surrounded by a clear halo. Ultrastructural examination revealed that intranuclear inclusions contained 90 to 110 nm diameter viral particles with electron-dense cores and hexagonal profiles. Viral particles were also present in the cytoplasm, and these were surrounded by variably electron-dense envelopes. Enveloped virions were 140 nm in diameter. Polymerase chain reactions targeting the DNA polymerase and terminase genes of herpesviruses were carried out on unfixed tissues of both animals, and analysis of the DNA products indicated the presence of two novel alphaherpesviruses. The gross, histologic, ultrastructural, and molecular genetic findings indicate disseminated herpesviral infections, and support the conclusion that the alphaherpesviruses caused the deaths of the two dolphins. This is the first report of disseminated herpesviral infection in cetaceans.

Blanchard, Santiago, Lipscomb, Garber, McFee, and Knowles: TWO NOVEL ALPHAHERPESVIRUSES ASSOCIATED WITH FATAL DISSEMINATED INFECTIONS IN ATLANTIC BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS
Terrell W. Blanchard, Nancy T. Santiago, Thomas P. Lipscomb, Richard L. Garber, Wayne E. McFee, and Susan Knowles "TWO NOVEL ALPHAHERPESVIRUSES ASSOCIATED WITH FATAL DISSEMINATED INFECTIONS IN ATLANTIC BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 37(2), 297-305, (1 April 2001). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-37.2.297
Received: 19 April 2000; Published: 1 April 2001
KEYWORDS
Bottlenose dolphin
heart
herpesvirus
inclusions
lymphoid necrosis
syncytial cells
thymus
Back to Top