RESUMO
The occurrence in chickens of small viruses with bisegmented double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) genome is confirmed and a new virus with similar properties but with three genome segments is described. Both differ from birnaviruses (Intervirology 25, 141-143, 1986) in having indistinct surface structure, smaller diameters (35 nm), and higher buoyant density (1.4 g/ml) in CsCl but are similar in these respects to viruses previously described in several mammals (Lancet 2, 103-104, 1988; J. Gen. Virol. 69, 2749-2754, 1988; Res. Vet. Sci, in press) under the tentative name of picobirnaviruses (PBV). Genome segment length estimations gave values of 2.6 and 1.9 kbp for the avian PBV and 2.9, 2.4 and 0.9 kbp for the trisegmented viruses. The source and pathogenic potential of these viruses remain to be established.
Assuntos
Galinhas/microbiologia , RNA de Cadeia Dupla/análise , Retroviridae/genética , Animais , Centrifugação com Gradiente de Concentração , Densitometria , Intestinos/microbiologia , Retroviridae/ultraestruturaRESUMO
During an epidemiological survey made in São Paulo (Brazil), fecal specimens were periodically collected from 100 randomly chosen babies from birth to the age of 18 months. The stools, routinely collected each month and also collected each time a child presented any sign of disease, were screened for the presence of adenoviruses. Sixteen adenovirus strains, isolated from the stools of healthy and ill children, were characterized by restriction enzyme analysis. Five isolates were from subgenus A, five were from subgenus B, four were from subgenus C, and two were from subgenus D. All but two showed some restriction patterns different from those of the 42 human adenovirus prototypes and all the genome types described up to now. No fastidious adenovirus (subgenus F, serotypes 40 and 41) was encountered in the stools examined. We report here the restriction enzyme analysis of isolates of subgenera B and C. The following new designation genome types are proposed: Ad3e1 (subgenus B) and Ad1d, Ad5a1, and Ad5a2 (subgenus C).