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. 1983 Apr;53(2):117-23.

Studies on Japanese encephalitis virus infection of reptiles. I. Experimental infection of snakes and lizards

  • PMID: 6141310

Studies on Japanese encephalitis virus infection of reptiles. I. Experimental infection of snakes and lizards

A Oya et al. Jpn J Exp Med. 1983 Apr.

Abstract

Experimental infection of four species of snakes, Rhabdophis tigrinus tigrinus, Elaphe quadrivirgata, Elaphe climacophora and Agkistrodon halys, and five species of lizards, Takydromus tachydromoides, Eumeces latiscutatus, Eumeces barbouri, Eumeces marginatus oshimensis and Gekko japonicus, with Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) was carried out. Evidence of JEV multiplication in snakes was not obtained at least under the conditions used in the present study. All lizards except G. japonicus were infected with JEV by ip injection of virus suspension. The minimum infectious dose for a lizard was around 10(3) MLD50/0.05 ml, and this dose was considered to be proportional to the virus dose which is injected into a host by a vector mosquito at a single bite. Temperature dependence of JE virus growth in the lizards was demonstrated. JEV multiplied slower at 20 degrees C than at 26 degrees C, though the peak titers of viremia were equivalent in both groups of lizards kept at 20 degrees C and 26 degrees C. E. latiscutatus developed viremia with ip injection of a partially attenuated strain, Nakayama NIH which could not infect adult mice by peripheral inoculation. T. tachydromoides and E. latiscutatus were also infected by oral feeding of JEV infected mosquitoes. E. latiscutatus was infected by oral feeding of only one infected mosquito.

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