Abstract

An iridovirus was isolated from two terrestrial isopods (class Crustacea, order Isopoda), the pill bug, Armadillidium vulgare, and the sow bug, Porcellio dilatatus, collected in southern California. The isolates have been designated Type 31 (from A. vulgare) and Type 32 (from P. dilatatus). Diseased isopods were recognized by a characteristic blue discoloration of the normally gray cuticle. Based on the relative number of virions observed in diseased cells, viral replication was most extensive in epidermal, muscle, and adipose tissue. Additionally, small clusters of midgut epithelial cells were heavily infected in many specimens, although replication throughout this tissue was never observed. Nerve and reproductive tissues were lightly infected. Infection was not observed in hemocytes or the hepatopancreatic caeca. Virions of both isolates measured ca. 125 nm in diameter in ultrathin sections and 141 nm in negatively stained preparations, and formed paracrystalline arrays in heavily infected cells. The isolation of a typical iridovirus from isopods further demonstrates that the natural host range of this virus group extends beyond the class Insecta.

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