1. A serological and virological survey for evidence of infection with Newcastle disease virus in Australian chicken farms.
- Author
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Kite VG, Boyle DB, Heine HG, Pritchard I, Garner MG, and East IJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Australia epidemiology, Hemagglutination Inhibition Tests veterinary, Newcastle disease virus isolation & purification, Newcastle disease virus pathogenicity, RNA, Viral analysis, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Virulence genetics, Antibodies, Viral blood, Chickens, Newcastle Disease epidemiology, Newcastle disease virus immunology, Poultry Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the prevalence and distribution of antibodies to Newcastle disease virus on Australian chicken farms and to determine the pathotype and relationships of the Newcastle disease viruses present on those farms., Design: A cross-sectional survey of 753 commercial chicken farms., Procedure: The survey comprised a detailed questionnaire and collection of venous blood samples. The titre of antibodies to Newcastle disease virus was determined by haemagglutination inhibition. Virus isolation was conducted from cloacal and tracheal swabs taken from chickens in serologically positive flocks. Virus isolates were pathotyped on the basis of the deduced Fusion protein cleavage site determined by nucleotide sequencing of a 265 bp region of the genome in the region of the cleavage site., Results: Antibody evidence of Newcastle disease virus infection was found on 300 of the 753 surveyed farms throughout all 11 geographic regions of the survey. The highest prevalence occurred in the Sydney basin, New South Wales and Victoria east regions. Antibody titres were also highest in the regions where serologically positive flocks were most prevalent. The 259 virus isolates revealed nine different RNA sequences. Of the nine virus groups isolated, the most common group W was identical in sequence to the V4 vaccine strain. Five of the other groups had novel RNA sequences in the region of the F protein cleavage site., Conclusions: Antibodies to Newcastle disease virus are highly prevalent in the Australian chicken flock but all identified strains were avirulent in nature.
- Published
- 2007
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