
Five Tupaia herpesviruses have been isolated until now: four in our laboratory which were termed THV-2, 3, 4, and 5, whereas THV-1 has been isolated by Melnick and his colleagues. THV-2 was isolated from tumour cell culture of a high-grade malignant lymphoma of a Tupaia, THV-3 was released from a cell culture of another Tupaia lymphoma, THV-4 from a spleen tissue culture of a moribund animal with finely granulated liver cirrhosis, and THV-5 from cultured spleen cells of an apparently healthy tree shrew. THV-1 to 5 were efficiently propagated, plaque-purified and cloned on Tupaia embryonic fibroblasts. The five isolates of Tupaia herpesviruses are easily distinguished from each other by restriction enzyme analysis of their genomes. THV-1 to 4 are highly pathogenic (lethality 100%) for juvenile Tupaias by intravenous inoculation. In contrast, only 25% lethality was found by intraperitoneal administration. THV-1 to 4 can persist as a latent infection in spleens of Tupaias and rabbits, which allows the recovery of infectious virus from cultured spleens of both animals. THV-2 and 3 induced hyperplasia of the thymus of rabbits which developed malignant thymoma in a few cases. The biological properties and genomic size and structure indicate that THV cannot be considered to belong to one of the three existing subfamilies of herpesviruses.
Tupaia, Tupaiidae, Rats, Mice, Cricetinae, Neoplasms, DNA, Viral, Animals, Rabbits, Herpesviridae
Tupaia, Tupaiidae, Rats, Mice, Cricetinae, Neoplasms, DNA, Viral, Animals, Rabbits, Herpesviridae
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