Historical Outbreaks of Simian Hemorrhagic Fever in Captive Macaques Were Caused by Distinct Arteriviruses.
Michael LauckSergey V AlkhovskyYīmíng BàoAdam L BaileyZinaida V ShevtsovaAlexey M ShchetininTatyana V VishnevskayaMatthew G LackemeyerElena N PostnikovaSteven MazurJiro WadaSheli R RadoshitzkyThomas C FriedrichBoris A LapinPetr G DeriabinPeter B JahrlingTony L GoldbergDavid H O'ConnorJ Thomas BeattyPublished in: Journal of virology (2015)
Simian hemorrhagic fever (SHF) is lethal for macaques. Based on clinical presentation and serological diagnosis, all reported SHF outbreaks were thought to be caused by different strains of the same virus, simian hemorrhagic fever virus (SHFV; Arteriviridae). Here we show that the SHF outbreaks in Sukhumi in 1964 and in Alamogordo in 1989 were caused not by SHFV but by two novel divergent arteriviruses. Our results indicate that multiple divergent simian arteriviruses can cause SHF.
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