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    The aetiology of wobbly possum disease: Reproduction of the disease with purified nidovirus.
    (2016-04) Giles J; Perrott M; Roe W; Dunowska M
    The objective of this study was to investigate a role of a recently discovered marsupial nidovirus in the development of a neurological disease, termed wobbly possum disease (WPD), in the Australian brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Four possums received 1 mL of a standard inoculum that had been prepared from tissues of WPD-affected possums, 4 possums received 1.8 mL (1 × 10(6) TCID50) of a cell lysate from inoculated cultures, and 4 possums received 1 mL (× 10(7) TCID50) of a purified WPD isolate. All but one possum that received infectious inocula developed neurological disease and histopathological lesions characteristic for WPD. High levels of viral RNA were detected in livers from all possums that received infectious inocula, but not from control possums. Altogether, our data provide strong experimental evidence for the causative involvement of WPD virus in development of a neurological disease in infected animals.
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    Prevalence of human papillomaviruses in the mouths of New Zealand women.
    (25/09/2015) Lucas-Roxburgh R; Benschop J; Dunowska M; Perrott M
    AIM: Human papillomavirus (HPV) in the oral cavity has been retrospectively associated with an increased risk of developing HPV-positive head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of oral HPV infection in a local population of New Zealand women aged 18 to 25 years, including determination of HPV genotypes, and to assess potential risk factors for oral HPV infection using participant questionnaire responses. METHODS: Oral brushings and questionnaire responses were collected from 234 women recruited from sexual health and student health centres. Questions covered age, ethnicity, sexual partners, alcohol consumption and smoking. PGMY primers were used for HPV detection by PCR, and results confirmed by sequencing and the cobas® 4800 HPV system. RESULTS: The prevalence of HPV infection was 3.2% of 216 women (95% CI: 1.6%-6.5%). Samples from two women (0.9%, 95% CI: 0.3%-3.3%) contained oncogenic HPV, and another five (2.3%, 95% CI: 1.0%-5.3%) were positive for HPV 13. No significant associations were found between putative risk factors and the presence of oral HPV infection. CONCLUSION: The prevalence of HPV in the oral cavity of New Zealand woman was comparable to results of other studies, but showed an unusual distribution of HPV types. The comparatively high detection rate of HPV 13 suggests that further work into clinical significance of oral HPV 13 infection is warranted.
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    Genetic characterization of equid herpesvirus type 1 from cases of abortion in Poland.
    (2017-08) Stasiak K; Dunowska M; Hills SF; Rola J
    Equid herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) is a common viral infection associated with varied clinical outcomes including respiratory disease, abortion and neurological disease. We have characterized EHV-1 sequences (n = 38) obtained from cases of equine abortion in Poland between 1999 and 2016, based on sequencing of PCR products from open reading frames (ORF) 30 and 68 of the EHV-1 genome. The majority (81.6%) of sequences were not classified into any of the previously described groups based on the ORF68 sequence. The remaining sequences belonged to ORF68 group III (7.9%) or IV (10.5%). A haplotype network analysis did not show any obvious structure within networks of local Polish sequences, nor within a global network of 215 EHV-1 sequences when these networks were coloured based on the geographical origin of viruses or date of detection. Our data suggest that ORF68 does not provide a reliable molecular marker for epidemiological studies of EHV-1, at least in a global sense. Its usefulness to aid local investigations of individual outbreaks remains to be established. All but two Polish EHV-1 sequences belonged to the ORF30 N752 genotype. The two ORF30 D752 viruses were obtained from abortion cases in 2009 and 2010. Hence, abortion cases that occurred in Poland between 1999 and 2016 were caused predominantly by EHV-1 with the ORF30 N752 genotype, with no indication of an increase in the prevalence of the ORF30 D752 variant.