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UCSF researchers identify virus behind mysterious parrot disease
(Our President’s Perch this month is a report found by Cindy W. and reprinted
with permission from the author, Kristen Bole, at
kbole@pubaff.ucsf.edu.)
Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, have identified
a virus behind the mysterious infectious disease that has been killing
parrots and exotic birds for more than 30 years.
The team, led by UCSF professors Joseph DeRisi, PhD, and Don
Ganem, MD, also has developed a diagnostic test for the virus linked to
Proventricular Dilatation Disease, or PDD, which will enable veterinarians
worldwide to control the spread of the virus.
Results of the study will be published in "Virology Journal" and will appear
online in August. The findings also will be presented in full at the August
11 annual meeting of the Association of Avian Veterinarians, in Savannah, GA.
The new virus, which the team named Avian Bornavirus (ABV), is a member of the bornavirus family,
whose other members cause encephalitis in horses and livestock. Working with veterinarians on two
continents, the group isolated this virus in 71 percent of the samples from infected birds, but none of the
healthy individuals.
"This discovery has potentially solved a mystery that has been plaguing the
avian veterinary community since the 1970s," said DeRisi, a molecular biologist
whose laboratory aided in the 2003 discovery of the virus causing Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome, or SARS, in humans. "These results clearly reveal the
existence of an avian reservoir of remarkably diverse bornaviruses that are
dramatically different from anything seen in other animals."
The discovery could have profound consequences on both domesticated parrots and
in the conservation of endangered species, according to DeRisi and Ganem, both Howard
Hughes Medical Investigators at UCSF. Those species include the Spix’s Macaw, currently
one of the most endangered birds in the world, whose number has dwindled to roughly 100
worldwide and whose continued existence is threatened by PDD.
The research was spearheaded by Amy Kistler, a postdoctoral fellow in the DeRisi and
Ganem labs. Together with veterinarians Susan Clubb, in the United States, and Ady
Gancz in Israel, Kistler analyzed affected birds using UCSF’s ViroChip technology.
The ViroChip, which DeRisi and Ganem developed, is a high-throughput screening technology
that uses a DNA microarray to test viral samples. The team was able to recover virus sequence
from a total of 16 diseased birds from two different continents. The complete genome sequence
of one isolate was captured using ultra deep sequencing.
The virus they identified is highly divergent from all previously identified members of the
"Bornaviridae" family and represents the first full-length bornavirus genome ever cloned directly
from avian tissue. Analysis of the Avian Bornavirus genome revealed at least five distinct varieties.
PDD is a fatal disease that causes nervous system disorders in both domesticated and wild birds in the
psittacine, or parrot, family worldwide. The disease has been found in 50 different species of parrots,
as well as five other orders of birds, and is widely considered to be the greatest threat to captive
breeding of birds in this family, the researchers said.
The disorder often leads to the birds’
inability to swallow and digest food,
with resulting wasting, many birds also
suffer from neurologic symptoms such
as imbalance and lack of coordination.
Regardless of the clinical course the
disease takes, it is often fatal.
Scientists have theorized for decades
that a viral pathogen was the source
of the disease, but until now, no one
had been able to identify the likely
culprit.
"This provides a very compelling lead
in the long-standing search for a viral
cause of PDD," Ganem said. "With
the development of molecular clones
and diagnostic tests for ABV, we can
now begin go explore both the epidemiology
of the virus and how it is
linked to the disease state."
Co-authors on the paper include Amy
L. Kistler, Peter Skewes-Cox, Kael
Fisher, Katherine Sorber, Charles Y.
Chiu and Alexander Greninger, from
the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
and Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology
and Medicine at UCSF;
Ady Gancz, from The Exotic Clinic,
Herzlyia, Israel; Susan Clubb, Rainforest
Clinic for Birds and Exotics, Loxahatchee,
Fla.; Avishai Lublin, Sara
Mechani and Yigal Farnoushi, of the
Division of Avian and Fish Diseases,
Kimron Veterinary Institute, bet Dagan,
Israel; and Scott B. Karlene, of
the Lahser Interspecies Research
Foundation, Bloomfield Hills, MI, Foundation.
The DeRisi Laboratory is part of the
Calinfornia Institute for Quantitative
Biosciences, known as QB3, a cooperative
effort among private industry
and more than 180 scientists at
UCSF, UC Berkeley and UC Santa
Cruz. The collaboration harnesses
the quantitative sciences to integrate
and enhance scientific understanding
of biological systems at all levels,
enabling scientists to tackle
The research was supported by
funding to DeRisi and Ganeem
from the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute and the Doris Duke
Charitable Foundation. Funding
for US specimen collection and
veterinary care was provided by
the Lahser Interspecies Research
UCSF is a leading university
dedicated to promoting health
worldwide through advanced
biomedical research, graduate-level
education in the life sciences and health
professions, and excellence in patient
care. For further information, please
visit www.ucsf.edu.
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