No evidence for a role of modified live virus vaccines in the emergence of canine parvovirus
U Truyen, K Geissler, CR Parrish, W Hermanns and G Siegl Institute for Medical Microbiology, Ludwig Maximillians University, Munich, Germany. Uwe.Truyen@LRZ.uni-muenchen.de In this study the early evolution and potential origins of canine parvovirus (CPV) were examined. We cloned and sequenced the V...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of general virology 1998-05, Vol.79 (5), p.1153-1158 |
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Zusammenfassung: | U Truyen, K Geissler, CR Parrish, W Hermanns and G Siegl
Institute for Medical Microbiology, Ludwig Maximillians University, Munich, Germany. Uwe.Truyen@LRZ.uni-muenchen.de
In this study the early evolution and potential origins of canine
parvovirus (CPV) were examined. We cloned and sequenced the VP2 capsid
protein genes of three German CPV strains isolated in 1979-1980, as well as
two feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) vaccine viruses that were previously
shown to have some restriction enzyme cleavage sites in common with CPV.
Other partial VP2 gene sequences were obtained by amplifying CPV DNA from
paraffin-embedded tissues of dogs which were early parvovirus disease cases
in Germany in 1978-1979. Sequences were analysed with respect to their
evolutionary relationships to other CPV and FPV isolates. Those analyses
did not support the hypothesis that CPV emerged as a variant of an FPV
vaccine virus. Neither did they reveal ancestral sequences among the very
early CPV isolates examined. Other possible sources for the origin of CPV
are examined, including the involvement of viruses from wild carnivores. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1317 1465-2099 |
DOI: | 10.1099/0022-1317-79-5-1153 |