Abstract
Aim:The study was undertaken to detect the clinical signs, postmortem lesions of embryonated duck plague (DP) infected eggs, and histopathological changes of chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) in non-descriptive ducks of West Bengal with special reference to standardize nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR).Materials and Methods:After postmortem of suspected carcasses, samples were collected for virus isolation and identification through specific pathogen free (Khaki Campbell) embryonated duck eggs. PCR was also done as confirmatory test after doing postmortem of duck embryos. DP specific nested PCR was standardized for better confirmation of the disease. Sensitivity of nested primers was also tested for DP virus.Results:Gross, postmortem and histopathological changes were prominent in dead embryos. First set of primer was able to detect 602 bp fragments of DNA polymerase gene of duck enteritis virus from infected CAM. Subsequently, a DP specific nested PCR which was very much sensitive for very small amount of viral genome was successfully standardized. After NCBI blast nucleotide sequence of nested PCR product (Accession No. HG425076) showed homology with the sequences data available in GenBank.Conclusion:The study concludes that PCR assay is very much helpful to diagnose DP disease and developed nested PCR is a double confirmatory diagnostic tool for DP.
Highlights
Duck virus enteritis (DVE) or duck plague (DP) is one of the most devastating diseases of duck, which facilitates huge economic losses every year in West Bengal
According to Animal Disease Surveillance Report of Government of West Bengal (2013), some DP prone zones of Hooghly, Burdwan, Purulia, Dakshin Dinajpur, and North-24 Parganas districts were selected for this study, where high mortality and morbidity was observed in previous years from
Our study focused down the histopathological changes of duck enteritis virus (DEV)-infected chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) first time which was enormous hemorrhage on CAM wall, round inflammatory zones with infiltration of mononuclear cells and heterophils
Summary
Duck virus enteritis (DVE) or duck plague (DP) is one of the most devastating diseases of duck, which facilitates huge economic losses every year in West Bengal. This disease is caused by anatid herpesvirus-1 under subfamily of Alphaherpesvirinae of family Herpesviridae [1]. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http:// creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated
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