Abstract
Canine distemper, a highly fatal systemic disease in domestic dogs and wild carnivores, has the second highest mortality rate after rabies and is responsible for a large number of animal deaths around the world. It is considered a major pathogen in the canine infectious respiratory disease complex. This paper reports the finding of a study conducted to detect and characterise canine distemper virus (Canine Morbillivirus) based on N gene. A total of 59 samples collected from cases of respiratory infections in dogs were subjected to N gene based reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and eleven of them (18.64 per cent) were found positive. Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis revealed that all the canine distemper viruses obtained in the present study were related to Indian strains that were previously reported. However, the viruses from the same district were similar among themselves.
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