Sheep inadvertently spread the
virus, mainly from their nasal secretions. Bison or other animals sharing
the same range, pasture, feed or, perhaps, water, with the sheep may come
into contact with the virus particles shed by the sheep. Notes O'Toole,
"The virus doesn't live very long once it's shed."
An early and telltale sign of the disease is a severe runny nose and
often a custardlike discharge that eventually encrusts the afflicted
animal's muzzle. Other symptoms that follow may include mouth ulcers;
cloudy, whitened eyes; swollen lymph nodes; bloody diarrhea; and a high
feveras much as 107°F, as compared to a healthy bison's normal
101° to 102°F.
Tests Identify Antibodies and Virus
Today there is no treatment or cure for MCF and no vaccine. Yet the
tests that Li and Crawford developed may someday help prevent this disease.
One assay is a CI-ELISA, short for competitive inhibition enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay. This blood test is best used for screening healthy
herds of MCF-susceptible animalsbison or cattle, for example.
It determines whether any of the animals, even if they are not showing
any signs of illness, are carrying an MCF virus.
Li points out, "Besides screening MCF-susceptible animals, the
test is also very useful for screening carrier animals, such as sheep,
for MCF virus." The team's CI-ELISA can detect even very small
amounts of antibodies that the animal makes in response to the invading
virus. Li explains that the CI-ELISA is the first test capable of detecting
antibodies that are formed in response to MCF viruses. It is a significant
improvement over earlier MCF blood tests.
Although the assay can indicate whether an animal has made antibodies
to MCF, it can't distinguish among members of the MCF virus family.
That's the job of tests that are based on what's called a polymerase
chain reaction, or PCR.
"Researchers in Scotland," says Li, "developed a PCR
for sheep MCF virus. We adapted that to develop other PCRs, including
a quantitative one for MCF research. The quantitative PCR tells us not
only which MCF virus is present, but also how much of it there is."
PCR tests are useful for identifying new MCF viruses. For example,
Li's group was the first to identify a new MCF virus in domestic goats.
What's more, they used PCR technology to discover another new MCF virus
that causes the disease in white-tailed deer. Li did the deer work with
veterinary pathologist Neil W. Dyer at North Dakota State University.
Having this array of PCRs may help reveal which viruses in the MCF
family are deadly to which species of livestock or wildlife. That information
could help livestock producers, wildlife specialists, and zoo managers.
Diagnostic Tests Prove Useful
Today these tests can be performed at regional veterinary diagnostic
laboratories on behalf of researchers and veterinarians who send in
specimens. For instance, the Washington Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory
at Washington State University processes between 800 and 1,000 MCF diagnostic
assays a year in addition to the thousands it runs for research purposes.
Zoos are also increasingly relying on the tests, reports Li. "They
want to test their own animals as well as those they are interested
in adding to their collections."
Li and Crawford have used the assays to determine a previously unknown
interval during which newborn lambs are virus-free. "We found that
most lambs are virus-free for about 6 to 8 weeks after birth,"
Li states. "So you can establish a virus-free flock if you take
lambs from their infected mothers before that time is up."
For that work, they collaborated with ARS animal scientist Gary D.
Snowder at the agency's U.S. Sheep Experiment Station, Dubois, Idaho.
Li says several zoos in North America have begun using this regimen
to produce MCF-free sheep.
In addition, the tests have been "very crucial to bison MCF research,"
asserts Li. Says colleague O'Toole, "The tests, for example, have
shown that cattle are significantly less susceptible to ovine herpesvirus
2 than are buffalo."
A study by researchers in Pullman and Laramie revealed that at least
25 to 35 percent of all bison are infected with the MCF virus.
Li received a top regional award from ARS in 2000 for his pioneering
research. In addition, he has served as special expert for the United
Nations in establishing diagnostic assays for MCF in West Africa.
Li and colleagues have reported their findings in the Journal of
Clinical Microbiology and the Journal of General Virology
as well as many veterinary science journals, including the Journal
of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation.
VMRD, Inc., of Pullman, Washington, sells the reagents for the MCF
CI-ELISA.
More information on MCF is available at http://www.uwyo.edu/vetsci/mcf_q&a.htm.By
Marcia Wood,
Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Animal Health, an ARS National Program
(#103) described on the World Wide Web at http://www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Hong Li is in the USDA-ARS
Animal Disease
Research Unit, 3003 Animal Disease Biological Facility, Washington
State University, Pullman, WA 99164; phone (509) 335-6002, fax (509)
335-8328.
"Battling Bisons' Mysterious MCF Disease" was published
in the June
2002 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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