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. 1991 Jan;50(1):38-44.
doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(91)90051-o.

Derivation of a DNA clone corresponding to the viral agent of sheep-associated malignant catarrhal fever

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Derivation of a DNA clone corresponding to the viral agent of sheep-associated malignant catarrhal fever

A Bridgen et al. Res Vet Sci. 1991 Jan.

Abstract

Malignant catarrhal fever is a fatal lymphoproliferative and degenerative disease of ruminants. One causative agent is the gammaherpesvirus alcelaphine herpesvirus 1 (AHV-1), which produces no disease in its natural host, the wildebeest (Connochaetes species). Epidemiological evidence implicates sheep as the carrier of a similar virus. However, attempts to culture this virus from sheep or from animals affected with sheep-associated malignant catarrhal fever (SA-MCF) have failed. Lymphoblastoid cells have been propagated from cattle, deer and rabbits with SA-MCF. Although these cells show no evidence of viral particles or antigens, hybridisation experiments now show that they contain DNA sequences homologous to those of AHV-1. A genomic library was constructed from one of these lymphoblastoid cell lines and a clone identified which hybridised to cloned AHV-1 DNA. The authors believe that this clone contains part of the SA-MCF viral genome, and that the SA-MCF virus and AHV-1 are closely related gammaherpesviruses.

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