Novel Endotheliotropic Herpesviruses Fatal for Asian and African Elephants

Author:

Richman Laura K.12,Montali Richard J.1,Garber Richard L.3,Kennedy Melissa A.4,Lehnhardt John1,Hildebrandt Thomas5,Schmitt Dennis6,Hardy Douglas7,Alcendor Donald J.2,Hayward Gary S.2

Affiliation:

1. Smithsonian, National Zoological Park, Washington, DC 20008, USA.

2. Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.

3. PathoGenesis Corporation, Seattle, WA 98119, USA.

4. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37901, USA.

5. Institute for Zoo Biology and Wildlife Research, D10305 Berlin, Germany.

6. Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield, MO 65804, USA.

7. Dickerson Park Zoo, Springfield, MO 65803, USA.

Abstract

A highly fatal hemorrhagic disease has been identified in 10 young Asian and African elephants at North American zoos. In the affected animals there was ultrastructural evidence for herpesvirus-like particles in endothelial cells of the heart, liver, and tongue. Consensus primer polymerase chain reaction combined with sequencing yielded molecular evidence that confirmed the presence of two novel but related herpesviruses associated with the disease, one in Asian elephants and another in African elephants. Otherwise healthy African elephants with external herpetic lesions yielded herpesvirus sequences identical to that found in Asian elephants with endothelial disease. This finding suggests that the Asian elephant deaths were caused by cross-species infection with a herpesvirus that is naturally latent in, but normally not lethal to, African elephants. A reciprocal relationship may exist for the African elephant disease.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference16 articles.

1. AZA Elephant Species Survival Plan unpublished statistics (1997).

2. L. K. Richman et al. in preparation.

3. Ossent P., et al., Vet. Pathol. 27, 131 (1990).

4. Metzler A. E., Ossent P., Guscetti F., Rubel A., Lang E. M., J. Wildlife Dis. 26, 41 (1990).

5. A. M. Hargis P. E. Ginn J. E. K. L. Mansell R. L. Garber Vet. Derm. in press.

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