Serological investigation of an outbreak of simian varicella in Erythrocebus patas monkeys
Autor: | Ann M. Arvin, N J Schmidt, Elizabeth A. Gard, David P. Martin |
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Rok vydání: | 1983 |
Předmět: |
Male
Microbiology (medical) Herpesvirus 3 Human viruses Radioimmunoassay Simian Simian varicella virus Virus Disease Outbreaks Erythrocebus patas Chickenpox medicine Animals Seroconversion Neutralizing antibody Epizootic biology Monkey Diseases virus diseases Outbreak biology.organism_classification medicine.disease Virology Antibody Formation biology.protein Research Article |
Zdroj: | Journal of Clinical Microbiology. 18:901-904 |
ISSN: | 1098-660X 0095-1137 |
DOI: | 10.1128/jcm.18.4.901-904.1983 |
Popis: | An epizootic of simian varicella occurring in a colony of Erythrocebus patas monkeys was studied serologically by using radioimmunoassay and neutralization tests against (i) a virus strain isolated from an animal that died during the epizootic, (ii) a simian varicella virus strain from an earlier outbreak of simian varicella-like disease at another facility, and (iii) human varicella-zoster virus. Serological tests detected more cases of infection among the animals exposed to virus during the epizootic than were evidenced by clinical findings; only 6 of the 26 animals with seroconversion developed a rash. Good correlation was seen between antibody responses demonstrated by radioimmunoassay and by the neutralization tests. Specificity of the radioimmunoassay was evidenced by the complete agreement with neutralization results for 17 animals which failed to show an antibody response over the course of the outbreak and were assumed not to have been infected. Thus radioimmunoassay is a reliable, rapid, and relatively economical method which could be used for serological screening of primates entering experimental colonies to identify those which might be potential sources of outbreaks through activation of latent simian varicella virus infection. Close correlation was seen between antibody responses to the virus strain from the current outbreak and the one from another epizootic, indicating that the two outbreaks were caused by antigenically similar viruses. Animals showing neutralizing antibody responses to the simian varicella viruses also showed responses to human varicella-zoster virus, which further substantiates the close antigenic relationship between human and simian varicella viruses. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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