- Infectious Diseases of Livestock
- Part 2
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: RHABDOVIRIDAE
- Enteric caliciviruses of pigs and cattle
- Porcine epidemic diarrhoea
- Porcine haemagglutinating encephalomyelitis virus infection
- Caprine arthritis-encephalitis
- Papillomavirus infection of ruminants
- Hendra virus infection
- Swine influenza
- Porcine deltacoronavirus infection
- Enzootic bovine leukosis
- Jaagsiekte
- Bovine coronavirus infection
- Papillomavirus infection of equids
- Porcine respiratory coronavirus infection
- Visna-maedi
- Pseudorabies
- Ovine coronavirus infection
- Equid gammaherpesvirus 2 and equid gammaherpesvirus 5 infections
- Suid herpesvirus 2 infection
- Adenovirus infections
- Bovine parvovirus infection
- Equid herpesvirus 1 and equid herpesvirus 4 infections
- Malignant catarrhal fever
- Porcine parvovirus infection
- Old World alphavirus infections in animals
- Equine coronavirus infection
- Equine coital exanthema
- Infectious bovine rhinotracheitis/infectious pustular vulvovaginitis and infectious pustular balanoposthitis
- Bovine alphaherpesvirus 2 infections
- Sheeppox and goatpox
- Pseudocowpox
- Bovine spongiform encephalopathy
- Buffalopox
- Ulcerative dermatosis
- Foot-and-mouth disease
- Scrapie
- Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies related to bovine spongiform encephalopathy in other domestic and captive wild species
- Borna disease
- Cowpox
- Encephalomyocarditis virus infection
- Orf
- Post-weaning multi-systemic wasting syndrome in swine
- Bovine rhinovirus infection
- Swine vesicular disease
- Camelpox
- Equine picornavirus infection
- Swinepox
- Teschen, Talfan and reproductive diseases caused by porcine enteroviruses
- Bovine papular stomatitis
- Horsepox
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: CIRCOVIRIDAE AND ANELLOVIRIDAE
- Rift Valley fever
- Getah virus infection
- Equine encephalosis
- Border disease
- Diseases caused by Akabane and related Simbu-group viruses
- Louping ill
- West nile virus infection
- Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever
- Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome
- Bovine viral diarrhoea and mucosal disease
- Equine encephalitides caused by alphaviruses in the Western Hemisphere
- Rotavirus infections
- Ibaraki disease in cattle
- African horse sickness
- Rabies
- Hog cholera
- African swine fever
- Bovine ephemeral fever
- Epizootic haemorrhagic disease
- Palyam serogroup orbivirus infections
- Nairobi sheep disease
- Wesselsbron disease
- Equine viral arteritis
- Vesicular stomatitis and other vesiculovirus infections
- Lumpy skin disease
- Bluetongue
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: ORTHOMYXOVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: RHABDOVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: PARAMYXOVIRIDAE AND PNEUMOVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: PRION DISEASES
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: ARTERIVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: RETROVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: HERPESVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: BUNYAVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: CORONAVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: POXVIRIDAE
- Peste des petits ruminants
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: TOGAVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: PICORNAVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: PARVOVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: BORNAVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: ASFARVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: PAPILLOMAVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: FLAVIVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: CALICIVIRIDAE AND ASTROVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: REOVIRIDAE
- GENERAL INTRODUCTION: ADENOVIRIDAE
- Rinderpest
- Vesicular exanthema
- Porcine transmissible gastroenteritis
- Bovine respiratory syncytial virus infection
- Equine influenza
- Paramyxovirus-induced reproductive failure and congenital defects in pigs
- Nipah virus disease
- Parainfluenza type 3 infection
- Equine infectious anaemia
GENERAL INTRODUCTION: RHABDOVIRIDAE
RHABDOVIRIDAE
A General Introduction has been added to each disease chapter in an attempt to give a brief updated overview of the taxonomic, biological and other characteristics of the virus family or group of bacteria /protozoa that cause disease in livestock and, where relevant, involve wildlife. As the text of the three-volume book Infectious Diseases of Livestock is currently under revision the Editors are aware that there are inconsistencies between the updated introductions to chapters and the content of the chapters themselves. Once the chapters have been updated – a process that is currently underway – these inconsistencies will be removed.
The family Rhabdoviridae contains a large number of diverse viruses, currently numbering 135 species distributed between 18 genera1. While most members of this family are so far unassociated with disease, some cause important diseases of animals and plants, including rabies (virus species name - Rabies lyssavirus) and rabies-like diseases of humans resulting from infection by related lyssaviruses, vesicular stomatitis in cattle, horses and pigs caused by a number of species in the Vesiculovirus genus and bovine ephemeral fever caused by Bovine fever ephemerovirus in cattle and water buffalo (Table 1).
Rhabdoviridae virions are enveloped with bullet-shaped (sometimes conical or in the case of plant rhabdoviruses, bacilliform), helically-coiled nucleocapsids. They have an extensive host-range that includes mammals (terrestrial and aquatic), birds, fish, reptiles, insects and plants. Together with seven other virus families, Rhabdoviridae are classified within the Order Mononegavirales, indicating that they have negative-sense, single-stranded RNA genomes (usually unsegmented).
Insect vectors are usually responsible for the transmission of members of the Rhabdoviridae to animals and plants.
New members of the family are discovered regularly which means that the number of genera and species increases continually. Furthermore, their discontinuous replication strategy gives rise to genome plasticity resulting in variation in genome organization and gene expression. This has been held to explain their ecological diversity and complex taxonomy2.
Table 1 Infections of mammalian livestock caused by viruses of the family Rhabdoviridae
Family | Genus | Species | Virus common name | Livestock species affected (source of infection) | Disease | Other virus species in the Genus |
Rhabdoviridae | Ephemerovirus | Bovine fever ephemerovirus | Bovine ephemeral fever virus | Cattle, water buffalo (mosquitoes & possibly midges) | Bovine ephemeral fever | Adelaide River ephemerovirus, |
Lyssavirus | Rabies lyssavirus | Rabies virus | All (saliva of infected animals) | Rabies |
| |
Duvenhage lyssavirus | Duvenhage virus | ? | Rabies-related diseases | Aravan lyssavirus, | ||
European bat 1 lyssavirus | European bat lyssaviruses 1 | ? | ||||
European bat 2 lyssavirus | European bat | ? | ||||
Lagos bat lyssavirus | Lagos bat virus | ? | ||||
Australian bat lyssavirus | Australian bat lyssavirus | ? | ||||
Vesiculovirus | Alagoas vesiculovirus | Vesicular stomatitis Alagoas virus | Cattle, horses, pigs (biting insects including sandflies) | Vesicular stomatitis | American bat vesiculovirus, | |
Cocal vesiculovirus | Cocal virus | |||||
Indiana vesiculovirus | Vesicular stomatitis Indiana virus | |||||
New Jersey vesiculovirus | Vesicular stomatitis New Jersey virus |
? - infection only confirmed in humans (bat bite)
References
- International Committee for Taxonomy of Viruses https://talk.ictvonline.org/taxonomy/ (accession date: 26/05/2017)
- MACLACHLAN N.J. & DUBOVI, E.J. (eds.), 2016. Veterinary Virology, 5th edition, Academic Press.
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