Animals (Dec 2022)

Pathological and Molecular Characterization of a Duck Plague Outbreak in Southern China in 2021

  • Zhipeng Liang,
  • Jinyue Guo,
  • Sheng Yuan,
  • Qing Cheng,
  • Xinyu Zhang,
  • Zhun Liu,
  • Congying Wang,
  • Zhili Li,
  • Bo Hou,
  • Shujian Huang,
  • Feng Wen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12243523
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 24
p. 3523

Abstract

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Duck plague (DP) is a highly contagious viral disease in ducks caused by the duck plague virus (DPV). The DPV, a member of Herpesviridae, poses a severe threat to the waterfowl farming industry worldwide. In this study, we reported a recent outbreak of DPV in domestic laying ducks at 310 days of age from southern China in December 2021. The gross lesion, histopathologic examination, molecular detection, and genetic characterization studies of DPV are described here. As a result, gross lesions such as an enlarged congestive spleen and liver were observed. Liver with vacuolar degeneration and small vacuoles and spleen with hemosiderosis were remarkable microscopic findings. Our results suggested that the liver had the highest viral load, followed by the trachea, pancreas, kidney, brain, spleen, and heart. In addition, DPV was successfully isolated in chicken embryo fibroblast cell culture and designated as DP-GD-305-21. The UL2, UL12, UL41, UL47, and LORF11 genes of DP-GD-305-21 shared a high nucleotide homology with the Chinese virulent (CHv) strain and the Chinese variant (CV) strain. In conclusion, this study reports the isolation and molecular characterization of DPV from a recent outbreak in southern China. Our results contributed to the understanding of the pathological and molecular characterization of currently circulating DPV in China.

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