Vesicular stomatitis is an economically important arboviral disease of livestock. Viremia is absent in infected mammalian hosts, and the mechanism by which insects become infected with the causative agents, vesicular stomatitis viruses, remains unknown. Because infected and noninfected insects potentially feed on the same host in nature, infected and noninfected black flies were allowed to feed on the same host. Viremia was not detected in the host after infection by a black fly bite, but because noninfected black flies acquired the virus while co-feeding on the same host with infected black flies, it is concluded that a viremic host is not necessary for an insect to be infected with the virus. Thus co-feeding is a mechanism of infection for an insect-transmitted virus.
Food-borne diseases such as salmonellosis can be attributed, in part, to the consumption of raw oysters. To determine the prevalence of Salmonella spp. in oysters, oysters harvested from 36 U.S. bays (12 each from the West, East, and Gulf coasts in the summer of 2002, and 12 bays, four per coast, in the winter of 2002-2003) were tested. Salmonella was isolated from oysters from each coast of the United States, and 7.4% of all oysters tested contained Salmonella. Isolation tended to be bay specific, with some bays having a high prevalence of Salmonella, while other bays had none. Differences in the percentage of oysters from which Salmonella was isolated were observed between the summer and winter months, with winter numbers much lower probably due to a variety of weather-related events. The vast majority (78/101) of Salmonella isolates from oysters were Salmonella enterica serovar Newport, a major human pathogen, confirming the human health hazard of raw oyster consumption. Contrary to previous findings, no relationship was found between the isolation of fecal coliforms and Salmonella from oysters, indicating a necessity for specific monitoring for Salmonella and other pathogens rather than the current reliance on fecal coliform testing.
Simulium vittatum females were shown to be competent vectors for the New Jersey serotype (VSNJ) of vesicular stomatitis virus (Camp Verde strain). Seventy percent of females infected intrathoracically transmitted infectious virions in their saliva after a 10-d incubation period. When infected with virus per os, 63% of the flies tested were positive at day 10, and 45% of flies infected in this manner also secreted virus in their saliva by day 9 or 10 after infection. When ingested by S. vittatum females, VSNJ virus readily replicated and increased from a mean baseline titer of 1.2 x 10(4) pfu per fly to 3 x 10(4) pfu per fly on day 10. An eclipse phase was demonstrated between approximately 18 and 48 h postinfection. This experimental evidence supports the hypothesis that black flies play a major role in the epizootic transmission of VSNJ. This is also the first confirmed example of biological transmission of an arbovirus by a member of the Simuliidae.
Canine distemper virus has been isolated in dog lymphocyte cultures from the brains of three javelinas that became moribund with signs of encephalitis. Canine distemper viral antigen was demonstrated predominantly in neurons and morbillivirus-like structures were seen by electron microscopy in brains of diseased animals. Serological studies suggest that CDV infection may be common in javelinas.
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