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Identification Of A Novel Piscine Retrovirus
Associated With An Outbreak Of Swimbladder Sarcoma In Atlantic Salmon, Salmo
salar Claudia A Sutton1, Sandra L Quackenbush2, Paul R Bowser1,Joel
Rovnak2, Rufina Casey1, James W Casey1 1Cornell University, Department of Microbiology and
Immunology, Ithaca NY; 2University of Kansas, Department of
Molecular Biosciences, Lawrence KS An outbreak of salmon swim
bladder sarcoma in Atlantic salmon at the North Attleboro National Fish
Hatchery occurred in 1997-8. Affected
fish were juveniles caught in the Pleasant River, ME as part of the New England
salmon restoration project. Besides mortality due to swim bladder sarcoma,
involved fish performed poorly, and did not attain sexual maturity. Our
laboratory identified retroviral pol sequences in the tumors by
degenerate PCR; the pol amplicon was also detected in blood DNA from
this fish population. The same amplicon was also detected in blood from other
Maine river-specific salmon broodstock, as well as in broodstock from a
commercial facility. We have now deduced the entire proviral sequence of the
retrovirus implicated in the swim bladder sarcoma outbreak, which we have named
SSSV-1. We have recently succeeded in transmission of the virus to salmon in
the lab using swim bladder tumor filtrate. In the course of the transmission
studies, we discovered that the recipient salmon, from the New York Adirondack
hatchery, which were negative for the SSSV-1 pol amplicon, were infected
with a second, highly related virus we call SSSV-2. More recently, a third
highly related virus has been detected in a wild Maine salmon. We hypothesize
that there are several SSSVs existing in the wild, and that infection of fish
with these viruses have negative consequences on fish viability. |