A new equine coronavirus was isolated from the feces of adult horses with pyrogenic and enteric disease. The disease outbreak was mainly observed among 2- to 4-year-old horses living in stables of a draft-horse racetrack in Japan. On comparing the isolated virus (isolate Tokachi09) with the equine coronavirus NC99 strain, no significant differences were observed in several biological properties such as hemagglutinating activity, antigenicity (in indirect immunofluorescence and neutralization tests), and one-step growth (in cell culture). The sequences of the nucleocapsid and spike genes of isolate Tokachi09 showed identical size (1341 and 4092 nucleotides, 446 and 1363 amino acids, respectively) and high similarity (98.0% and 99.0% at the nucleotides, 97.3% and 99.0% at the amino acids, respectively) to those of strain NC99. However, the isolate had a 185-nucleotide deletion from four bases after the 3'-terminal end of the spike gene, resulting in the absence of the open reading frame predicted to encode a 4.7-kDa nonstructural protein in strain NC99. These results suggest that the 4.7-kDa nonstructural protein is not essential for viral replication, at least in cell culture, and that the Japanese strain probably originated from a different lineage to the North American strain. This is the first equine coronavirus to be isolated from adult horses with pyrogenic and enteric disease.
Here, we used a sheep bioassay to determine the effect of freezing colostrum to prevent
the transmission of bovine leukemia virus (BLV) among neonatal calves. Leukocytes were
isolated from the colostrum of a BLV-infected Holstein cow and were then either left
untreated (control) or freeze-thawed. A sheep inoculated intraperitoneally with the
untreated leukocytes was infected with BLV at 3 weeks after inoculation, whereas the sheep
inoculated with treated leukocytes did not become infected. The uninfected sheep was
inoculated again with leukocytes isolated from the colostrum of another BLV-infected
Holstein cow after freezing treatment, and again it did not become infected with BLV.
Finally, this sheep was inoculated with the leukocytes isolated from the colostrum of
another virus-infected cow without freezing treatment, and it became infected with BLV at
4 weeks after inoculation. The results indicate that colostrum should be frozen as a
useful means of inactivating the infectivity of BLV-infected lymphocytes.
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