
Cetacean Morbillivirus Infection in a Killer Whale (Orcinus orca) from Brazil
2020; Elsevier BV; Volume: 181; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.jcpa.2020.09.012
ISSN1532-3129
AutoresKátia R. Groch, Hassan Jerdy, Milton CC Marcondes, Lupércio A. Barbosa, Hernani G. C. Ramos, Larissa Pavanelli, Luz Alba MG Fornells, Marina B Silva, Giliane S. Souza, Milton M. Kanashiro, Pollyana Silva Bussad, Leonardo Serafim da Silveira, Samira Costa‐Silva, Dominique J. Wiener, Carlos E. P. F. Travassos, José Luiz Catão‐Dias, Josué Díaz‐Delgado,
Tópico(s)Animal Virus Infections Studies
ResumoWe provide pathological, immunohistochemical and molecular evidence of cetacean morbillivirus (CeMV) infection in a live-stranded adult female killer whale (Orcinus orca), which stranded alive in Espírito Santo State, Brazil, in 2014. Although attempts were made to release the animal, it stranded again and died. The main pathological findings were severe pulmonary oedema, pleural petechiation, multifocal, lymphoplasmacytic meningoencephalitis and leptomeningomyelitis with perivascular cuffing and gliosis, chronic lymphocytic bronchointerstitial pneumonia and multicentric lymph node and splenic lymphoid depletion. Other pathological findings were associated with the 'live-stranding stress response'. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed multifocal morbilliviral antigen in neurons and astrocytes, and in pneumocytes, histiocytes and leukocytes in the lung. CeMV was detected by a novel reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction method in the brain and kidney. Phylogenetic analysis of part of the morbillivirus phosphoprotein gene indicates that the virus is similar to the Guiana dolphin (Sotalia guianensis) morbillivirus strain, known to affect cetaceans along the coast of Brazil. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of morbillivirus disease in killer whales.
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