Emerging Infectious Diseases (Apr 2002)

Experimental Infection of Horses with West Nile virus

  • Michel L. Bunning,
  • Richard A. Bowen,
  • C. Bruce Cropp,
  • Kevin G. Sullivan,
  • Brent S. Davis,
  • Nicholas Komar,
  • Marvin S. Godsey,
  • Dale Baker,
  • Danielle L. Hettler,
  • Derek A. Holmes,
  • Brad J. Biggerstaff,
  • Carl J. Mitchell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0804.010239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
pp. 380 – 386

Abstract

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A total of 12 horses of different breeds and ages were infected with West Nile virus (WNV) via the bites of infected Aedes albopictus mosquitoes. Half the horses were infected with a viral isolate from the brain of a horse (BC787), and half were infected with an isolate from crow brain (NY99-6625); both were NY99 isolates. Postinfection, uninfected female Ae. albopictus fed on eight of the infected horses. In the first trial, Nt antibody titers reached >1:320, 1:20, 1:160, and 1:80 for horses 1 to 4, respectively. In the second trial, the seven horses with subclinical infections developed Nt antibody titers >1:10 between days 7 and 11 post infection. The highest viremia level in horses fed upon by the recipient mosquitoes was approximately 460 Vero cell PFU/mL. All mosquitoes that fed upon viremic horses were negative for the virus. Horses infected with the NY99 strain of WNV develop low viremia levels of short duration; therefore, infected horses are unlikely to serve as important amplifying hosts for WNV in nature.

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