نتایج جستجو برای: feline panleukopenia virus

تعداد نتایج: 402116  

Journal: :The Japanese Journal of Veterinary Science 1986

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2017
Anne-Lise Chaber Gabriele Cozzi Femke Broekhuis Robyn Hartley John W McNutt

The recent increase in the creation of transboundary protected areas and wildlife corridors between them lends importance to information on pathogen prevalence and transmission among wildlife species that will become connected. One such initiative is the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area of which Botswana's Okavango Delta constitutes a major contribution for wildlife and ecosystem...

Journal: :BMC veterinary research 2016
Mutien Garigliany Gautier Gilliaux Sandra Jolly Tomas Casanova Calixte Bayrou Kris Gommeren Thomas Fett Axel Mauroy Etienne Lévy Dominique Cassart Dominique Peeters Luc Poncelet Daniel Desmecht

BACKGROUND Perinatal infections with feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) have long been known to be associated with cerebellar hypoplasia in kittens due to productive infection of dividing neuroblasts. FPV, like other parvoviruses, requires dividing cells to replicate which explains the usual tropism of the virus for the digestive tract, lymphoid tissues and bone marrow in older animals. RESULTS...

Journal: :Journal of the South African Veterinary Association 2000
M van Vuuren A Steinel T Goosen E Lane J van der Lugt J Pearson U Truyen

The low incidence of clinical signs or pathological lesions compatible with feline panleukopenia in cats has created the perception among practitioners that the disease has disappeared since the emergence of canine parvovirus type 2 in the late 1970s. Three parvoviruses that were recently isolated from a domestic cat and 2 cheetahs in cell culture or detected by means of the polymerase chain re...

Journal: :The Journal of veterinary medical science 1999
M Mochizuki N Osawa T Ishida

Fecal samples were examined for viruses participated in gastrointestinal disorders of cats, especially focusing on feline coronavirus (FCoV) by a reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction assay. It was found that a primary viral pathogen was feline panleukopenia parvovirus (FPLV; 28.5% of the positive rate) and the secondary was FCoV (10.7%). Commonly reported clinical signs of cats of wh...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2004
Seth P D Riley Janet Foley Bruno Chomel

Exposure of bobcats (Lynx rufus) and gray foxes (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) to a range of common canine and feline pathogens was assessed in urban and rural zones of Golden Gate National Recreation Area, a National Park in the San Francisco Bay Area, (California, USA) from 1992 to 1995. Testing included serology for canine distemper virus, canine parvovirus (CPV), canine adenovirus, Leptospira i...

2016
Hongxia Wu Shaopo Zu Xue Sun Yongxiang Liu Jin Tian Liandong Qu

Feline Calicivirus (FCV) infection results in the inhibition of host protein synthesis, known as "shut-off". However, the precise mechanism of shut-off remains unknown. Here, we found that the FCV strain 2280 proteinase-polymerase (PP) protein can suppress luciferase reporter gene expression driven by endogenous and exogenous promoters. Furthermore, we found that the N-terminal 263 aa of PP (PP...

Journal: :Veterinary journal 2013
Brian J Willett Margaret J Hosie

In the early 1960s, Professor William (Bill) F.H. Jarrett was presented with a time-space cluster of cats with lymphoma identified by a local veterinary practitioner, Harry Pfaff, and carried out experiments to find if the condition might be caused by a virus, similar to lymphomas noted previously in poultry and mice. In 1964, the transmission of lymphoma in cats and the presence of virus-like ...

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