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Characterization of Early Pathogenic Effects after Experimental Infection of Calves with Bovine Immunodeficiency-Like Virus.

Version 2 2024-06-04, 06:33
Version 1 1992-02-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 06:33 authored by S Carpenter, LD Miller, Soren AlexandersenSoren Alexandersen, CA Whetstone, MJ VanDerMaaten, B Viuff, Y Wannemuehler, JM Miller, JA Roth
The early pathogenic effects of bovine immunodeficiency-like virus (BIV) were studied in calves experimentally inoculated with BIV. All animals inoculated with BIV R29-infected cells seroconverted by 6 weeks postinoculation, and BIV was recoverable from each animal at 2 weeks postinoculation. However, levels of BIV replication in vivo appeared to be low. In situ hybridization studies indicated that during peak periods of viral replication in vivo, less than 0.03% of peripheral blood mononuclear cells were expressing detectable levels of viral RNA. Moreover, the levels of viral RNA in these cells in vivo were less than 1/10 the levels observed in persistently infected cells in vitro. BIV-inoculated calves had significantly higher numbers of circulating lymphocytes, and follicular hyperplasia was observed in lymph nodes, hemal nodes, and spleen. The histopathological changes observed in BIV-infected calves were similar to changes found early after infection with the immunosuppressive lentiviruses, including human immunodeficiency virus type 1.

History

Location

United States

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN.1 Other journal article

Journal

Journal of Virology

Volume

66

Pagination

1074-1083

ISSN

0022-538X

Issue

2

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

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