19 research outputs found
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is strongly associated with productive infection by herpesvirus saimiri
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a fatal disease without effective therapy or diagnostic test. To investigate a
potential role for c�herpesviruses in this disease, 21 paraffin-embedded lung biopsies from patients diagnosed
with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and 21 lung biopsies from age-matched controls with pulmonary fibrosis of
known etiology were examined for a series of cďż˝herpesvirusesâ DNA/RNA and related proteins using in situ
hybridization and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)-based methods. We detected four
proteins known to be in the genome of several c�herpesviruses (cyclin D, thymidylate synthase, dihydrofolate
reductase, and interleukin-17) that were strongly co-expressed in the regenerating epithelial cells of each of the
21 idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis cases and not in the benign epithelia of the controls. Among the cďż˝
herpesviruses, only herpesvirus saimiri expresses all four of these âpiratedâ mammalian proteins. We found
herpesvirus saimiri DNA in the regenerating epithelial cells of 21/21 idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis cases using
four separate probe sets but not in the 21 controls. RT-PCR showed that the source of the cyclin D RNA in active
idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis was herpesvirus saimiri and not human. We cloned and sequenced part of
genome corresponding to the DNA polymerase herpesvirus saimiri gene from an idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
sample and it matched 100% with the published viral sequence. These data are consistent with idiopathic
pulmonary fibrosis representing herpesvirus saimiri-induced pulmonary fibrosis. Thus, treatment directed
against viral proliferation and/or viral-associated proteins may halt disease progression. Further, demonstration
of the viral nucleic acids or proteins may help diagnose the disease
Two different macaviruses, ovine herpesvirus-2 and caprine herpesvirus-2, behave differently in water buffaloes than in cattle or in their respective reservoir species
The ongoing global spread of âexoticâ farm animals, such as water buffaloes, which carry their native sets of viruses, may bear unknown risks for the animals, into whose ecological niches the former are introduced and vice versa. Here, we report on the occurrence of malignant catarrhal fever (MCF) on Swiss farms, where âexoticâ water buffaloes were kept together with ânativeâ animals, i.e. cattle, sheep, and goats. In the first farm with 56 water buffaloes, eight cases of MCF due to ovine herpesvirus-2 (OvHV-2) were noted, whereas additional ten water buffaloes were subclinically infected with either OvHV-2 or caprine herpesvirus-2 (CpHV-2). On the second farm, 13 water buffaloes were infected with CpHV-2 and two of those succumbed to MCF. In neither farm, any of the two viruses were detected in cattle, but the Macaviruses were present at high prevalence among their original host species, sheep and goats, respectively. On the third farm, sheep were kept well separated from water buffaloes and OvHV-2 was not transmitted to the buffaloes, despite of high prevalence of the virus among the sheep. Macavirus DNA was frequently detected in the nasal secretions of virus-positive animals and in one instance OvHV-2 was transmitted vertically to an unborn water buffalo calf. Thus, water buffaloes seem to be more susceptible than cattle to infection with either Macavirus; however, MCF did not develop as frequently. Therefore, water buffaloes seem to represent an interesting intermediate-type host for Macaviruses. Consequently, water buffaloes in their native, tropic environments may be vulnerable and endangered to viruses that originate from seemingly healthy, imported sheep and goats