Publication:
Genetic heterogeneity of bovine viral diarrhoea virus (BVDV) isolates from Turkey: Identification of a new subgroup in BVDV-1

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2008-08-25

Authors

Yesilbağ, Kadir
Foerster, Christine
Bank-Wolf, Barbara
Yılmaz, Zeki
Alkan, Feray
Özkul, Aykut
Burgu, İbrahim
Rosales, Sibilina Cedillo
Thiel, Heinz-Juergen
Koenig, Matthias

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier Science Bv

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Genetic heterogeneity of Turkish ruminant pestiviruses was investigated by phylogenetic analysis of complete N-pro encoding nucleotide sequences. A total of 30 virus isolates obtained from 15 provinces around the country between 1997 and 2005 were included in the phylogenetic analysis. Virus isolates mostly originated from cattle with one isolate from sheep. The bovine isolates all belonged to BVDV-1, the sheep isolate to BVDV-2. Fifteen isolates formed a new subgroup within BVDV-1, tentatively named BVDV-1l. The remaining bovine isolates were typed as BVDV-la (n = 4), BVDV-lb (n = 4), BVDV-ld (n = 3), BVDV-If (n = 2) andBVDV-1h(n = 1). The isolates allocated to BVDV-1l originated from various geographical regions indifferent years. There was no correlation between genetic grouping and locations where isolates were obtained. Viruses originating from one farm in most cases belonged to the same subgroup (n = 5). This study indicates that the newly detected subgroup BVDV-1l is predominant and widespread in Turkey. Moreover, an ovine virus isolate was identified as the first member of BVDV-2 reported in Turkey. A serological survey using samples from western Turkey indicated that BVDV-2 is also present in cattle. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Description

Keywords

Phylogenetic analysis, Pestiviruses, Diversity, Ruminants, Genotypes, Strains, Bvdv-1, Bvdv-2, Genetic heterogeneity, Rt-pcr, Serological survey, Turkey, Microbiology, Veterinary sciences

Citation

Collections

1

Views

0

Downloads

Search on Google Scholar