Abstract

Dogs were inoculated with either an Ethiopian of Mexican rabies virus strain. The distribution of viral antigen and lesions were studied by immunofluorescence, histologic and electron microscopic techniques. In all dogs inoculated with the Ethiopian rabies virus strain, tremendous whorls of filamentous fluorescing aggregates were observed throughout the brain; these were not observed in dogs inoculated with the Mexican virus. Lesions consisted on neuronal degeneration and neuronophagia, associated with large inclusion bodies and widespread inflammation in dogs inoculated with the Ethiopian isolate. All observed portions of the brain and spinal cord were affected. In general, lesions were much less severe with Mexican isolate. Occasional astrocytes were observed to have inclusions in dogs inoculated both with Ethiopian and Mexican strains. Most neurons examined electronmicroscopically showed signs of infection, varying from a small granular or finely fibrillar viral matrix to numerous matrices accompanied by prolific numbers of virus particles occupying much of the perikaryon. These were found in all dogs inoculated with the Ethiopian strain but were rare with the Mexican isolate. Viral budding occurred from membranes of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, outer lamella of the nuclear envelope, and rarely from the plasma membrane.

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