Title: HERPESVIRIDAE
1HERPESVIRIDAE
- PETER H. RUSSELL, BVSc, PhD, FRCPath, MRCVS
- Department of Pathology and Infectious Diseases,
The Royal Veterinary College, - Royal College Street,
- London NW1 OTU.
- E-mail Web site
2ObjectivesStudents should be able to
- Give 3 reasons why herpesviruses are difficult to
control. - Know the difference between immediate-early,
early and late genes and their roles in disease
and tumours. - List the major diseases in each species of
animals and the tissue-tropism of the causative
virus
3Replication
- The uncoated double stranded DNA becomes a closed
circle in the host nucleus - Three types of genes are involved in replication
4Herpesviruses are bad news for 4 reasons.
5Virulence is associated with presence of a
thymidine kinase (tk) gene, so this is deleted
from genetically engineered vaccines eg to
Aujeskys virus. Tk acclerates new DNA synthesis
by salvaging thymidine from degraded DNA into
TTP. It has been widely used to select cells eg
hybridoma's or those which are expressing
recombinant vaccines see Russell and Edington,
page 99.
6Research. 3 growth areas
7The members of the herpesviridae according to
host and major disease patterns
8The members of the herpesviridae according to
host and major disease patterns
9The members of the herpesviridae according to
host and major disease patterns
10The members of the herpesviridae according to
host and major disease patterns
11The major members of the herpesviridae according
to host and major disease patterns
12The major members of the herpesviridae according
to host and major disease patterns
13The major members of the herpesviridae according
to host and major disease patterns
14The major members of the herpesviridae according
to host and major disease patterns
15The major members of the herpesviridae according
to host and major disease patterns
16The major members of the herpesviridae according
to host and major disease patterns
17Equid herpesvirus 1(1)
- This is the most common cause of abortion in
mares in the U.K. It also causes respiratory
disease and, more rarely, paresis
18Equid herpesvirus 1(2)
- This is the most common cause of abortion in
mares in the U.K. It also causes respiratory
disease and, more rarely, paresis
19Equid herpesvirus 4
- This virus cannot be distinguished from EHV 1 by
polyclonal sera - but can be distinguished by
mAbs, PCR probes and by RE profile. It is more
prevalent than EHV 1 (by a factor of 2) in the
U.K., but in the majority of cases it only causes
respiratory disease.
20Bovid herpesvirus 1
- Pathogenesis
- Rhinotrachietis with lacrimation then
lymphocyte-associated viraemia and then latency
in cranial ganglia. Can cause 75 mortality of
feed lot cattle with bronchpneumonia. Viraemia
can spread to cause meningo-encephalitis,
especially in calves, infectious pustular
vulvovaginits and abortion.
21Bovid herpesvirus 2 (Bovine mammillitis virus)
- Moist, raised erosions/plaques on teats with
spread to udder - A zoonosis of milkers.
- Infection can be a perennial problem in winter
22Bovid herpesvirus 3
- (Malignant catarrhal fever virus)
23Suid herpesvirus 1
- Notifiable.
- Also known as Aujeszky's disease, pseudorabies,
"mad itch". - While this has been eradicated from mainland
Britain by a pig levy and area eradication scheme
it is still present in much of Europe and
Ireland.
24 25Felid herpesvirus 1
- The virus is widespread within the feline
population. It affects the upper respiratory
tract but erosions affect the bronchii and
interstital pneumonia can result. Latent
infections can be reactivated during boarding..
Infections are often concurrent with calicivirus
and chlamydial infections.
26Herpes B Virus
- Monkeys. Asiatic (old world) monkeys (eg
macaques and rhesus) are the natural hosts. In
the wild only 10 of the population carry latent
virus in ganglia/have antibodies but in captive
colonies, where monkeys are kept at high density,
the prevalence is frequently 60. - The lesions in monkeys are oral focal erosions,
very similar to cold sores of man. New world
monkeys, like man, die with encephalitis and do
not excrete salivary virus.
27Summary
- EHV1 is a disease not only of the resp tract but
also causes abortion storms and paresis.
Vaccines are not good and so the Jockey club has
regs re isolation and transport after abortions - IBR causes a spectrum of disease and live
vaccines can reduce disease. - Porcine herpevirus 1 is a notifiable disease
which cause abortion in sows and some fatalies
after encephalitis in piglets and fatal
pseudorabies in carnovores and ruminants. It has
been eradicated from GB, but not N.Ireland. - Feline herpes can be reactivated during boarding
to cause erosive lesions - Herpesvirus B only causes oral lesions in
monkeys, but causes a fatal encephalitis in man.