1. Detection of Visna Maedi virus in mesenteric lymph nodes and in other lymphoid tissues of sheep three years after respiratory infection
- Author
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Giacomo Renzoni, Silvia Preziuso, Subeide Mari, and Gian Enrico Magi
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Maedi ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,General Veterinary ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Respiratory infection ,Spleen ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Biology ,Visna-maedi virus ,Virology ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic system ,medicine ,Mesenteric lymph nodes ,Lymph ,Lymph node - Abstract
Visna/Maedi virus (VMV), a small ruminant lentivirus responsible for lymphoproliferative pneumonia, encephalitis, arthritis and/or mastitis in sheep, has been detected in different non-lymphoid organs. However, only a few investigations have been carried out in lymphoid tissues. In this study, some lymphoid tissues and lymph node draining or non-draining VMV target organs from five sheep infected experimentally by the respiratory route three years previously were investigated. Archival samples of spleen, red bone marrow, caudal mediastinal lymph nodes, mammary lymph nodes, popliteal lymph nodes and mesenteric lymph nodes were tested by PCR for the presence of proviral DNA. Popliteal and mesenteric lymph node samples were tested also by immunohistochemi - cal staining of the viral capsid antigen p28. The proviral DNA was detected by PCR in all the lymphoid tissue samples from the infected sheep. The viral antigen was stained in mononuclear cells in popliteal and mesenteric lymph nodes of the infected sheep. Although the lymph nodes draining the classical target organs seem to be more infected than the others, both the viral capsid antigen and the proviral DNA were present also in lymph nodes draining non-target organs, such as the mesenteric lymph nodes. These findings show the presence of VMV in different lymphoid tissues in the late stages of infection and suggest a potential role of these tissues as a site for viral reservoir and replication, even three years after infection.
- Published
- 2013
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