Abstract

The horse population in Iceland is a special breed, isolated from other equines for at least one thousand years. This provides an exceptional opportunity to investigate old and new pathogens in a genetically closed herd. Both types of equine gammaherpesviruses, EHV-2 and EHV-5, are common in Iceland.Genetic variation was examined by sequencing four genes, glycoprotein B (gB), glycoprotein H (gH), DNA polymerase and DNA terminase for 12 Icelandic and seven foreign EHV-2 strains. One Icelandic virus isolate, gEHV-Dv, induced syncytium formation, an uncharacteristic cytopathy for EHV-2 in equine kidney cells. When sequenced, the glycoprotein genes were different from both EHV-2 and EHV-5, but the polymerase and terminase genes had 98–99% identity to EHV-2. Therefore the gEHV-Dv strain can be considered a variant of EHV-2.Substantial genetic variability was seen within the EHV-2 glycoprotein genes but limited in the polymerase and terminase genes. The Icelandic EHV-2 strains do not seem to differ phylogenetically from the foreign viruses, despite isolation for over a thousand years.

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