ABSTRACT. Only two strains (Shintoku and porcine-like WD534tc) of group C rotavirus (GCR) from cattle have been reported to date. A GCR designated the Yamagata strain was the only pathogen detected in an outbreak of adult cow diarrhea accompanied by a decrease in milk production. The nucleotide sequences of the VP6 and VP7 genes from strain Yamagata were determined. Comparative sequence analysis showed that the sequence identities between strains Yamagata and Shintoku were markedly high in both VP6 gene (98.1%) a nd VP7 gene (93.5%), and that these strains belonged to the same clusters which were distinguished from GCRs from different host sp ecies in phylogenetic trees of these genes. These results suggested strongly that cattle species is one of the natural hosts of GCR infection, and that GCRs are a cause of adult cow diarrhea.
The porcine parvovirus 2 (PPV2) genome was first identified in 2001 in Myanmar. Recently, the PPV2 genome has been found in several other countries. In this study, the prevalence of PPV2 in Japanese domestic pigs was investigated and found to be 58% (69/120) in healthy domestic pigs and 100% (69/ 69) in sick domestic pigs. Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of the PCR products of the VP1 gene and an almost full length PPV2 clone indicated that diverged PPV2 strains exist in Japan. Clearly distinct strains of PPV2 were detected in 7 of the 10 pig farms.
The infection status of 15 viruses in 120 pigs aged about 6 months was investigated based
on tonsil specimens collected from a slaughterhouse. Only 5 species of porcine
parvoviruses and porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) were detected at high frequencies; 67%
for porcine parvovirus (PPV) (PPV-Kr or -NADL2 as the new abbreviation), 58% for PPV2
(CnP-PARV4), 39% for PPV3 (P-PARV4), 33% for PPV4 (PPV4), 55% for PBo-likeV (PBoV7) and
80% for PCV2. A phylogenetic analysis of PPV3 suggested that Japanese PPV3s showed a
slight variation, and possibly, there were farms harboring homogeneous or heterogeneous
PPV3s. Statistical analyses indicated that the detection of PCV2 was significantly
coincidental with each detection of PPV, PPV2 and PPV3, and PPV and PPV4 were also
coincidentally detected. The concurrent infection with PCV2 and porcine parvoviruses in
the subclinically infected pigs may resemble the infection status of pigs with the
clinical manifestations of porcine circovirus associated disease which occurs in 3–5
months old pigs and is thought to be primarily caused by the PCV2 infection.
The economic consequences of bovine diarrhea are serious. Few long-term epidemiological data are available concerning the causative pathogens of bovine diarrhea in Japan. From 2002 to 2011, surveillance of enteric pathogens was performed in cows of various breed and age from 302 farms in which diarrhea had occurred in Yamagata Prefecture, Japan. Differences between dairy and beef cows in the number of cases of diarrhea and rates of infection by Salmonella spp. and Eimeria spp. were found. Clinical symptoms (duration of epidemic, hematochezia and complications) caused by bovine rotavirus infection were milder than those caused by bovine coronavirus infection.
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