PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Identification and characterization of two novel viruses in ocular infections in reindeer.

  • Saskia L Smits,
  • Claudia M E Schapendonk,
  • Marije van Leeuwen,
  • Thijs Kuiken,
  • Rogier Bodewes,
  • V Stalin Raj,
  • Bart L Haagmans,
  • Carlos G das Neves,
  • Morten Tryland,
  • Albert D M E Osterhaus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069711
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 7
p. e69711

Abstract

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A thorough understanding of virus diversity in wildlife provides epidemiological baseline information about pathogens. In this study, eye swab samples were obtained from semi-domesticated reindeer (Rangifertarandus tarandus) in Norway during an outbreak of infectious eye disease, possibly a very early stage of infectious keratoconjunctivitis (IKC). Large scale molecular virus screening, based on host nucleic acid depletion, sequence-independent amplification and next-generation sequencing of partially purified viral nucleic acid, revealed the presence of a new papillomavirus in 2 out of 8 eye swab samples and a new betaherpesvirus in 3 out of 8 eye swab samples collected from animals with clinical signs and not in similar samples in 9 animals without clinical signs. Whether either virus was responsible for causing the clinical signs or in any respect was associated to the disease condition remains to be determined.