Comer J A, Stallknecht D E, Nettles V F
Department of Parasitology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens 30602, USA.
J Med Entomol. 1995 Sep;32(5):741-4. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/32.5.741.
Seven domestic pigs, Sus scrofa L., were infected by intradermal inoculation at 3 different sites with the New Jersey serotype of vesicular stomatitis (VSNJ) virus. Laboratory-reared Lutzomyia shannoni Dyar sand flies, a suspected biological vector of VSNJ virus, were allowed to feed on pigs at the lower abdomen or at sites of their own selection on days 1-7 and on day 10 postinfection. Blood samples were taken from infected swine concomitant with most feeding trials and tested for the presence of virus. Sand flies were held for up to 5 d following ingestion of blood and tested for VSNJ virus infection. Virus was not recovered from the blood of infected pigs or from any of the flies that fed on these pigs. The findings suggest that domestic pigs do not fulfill the traditional concept of amplifying hosts of VSNJ virus.
七头家猪(Sus scrofa L.)在三个不同部位进行皮内接种,感染了新泽西血清型水疱性口炎(VSNJ)病毒。实验室饲养的桑氏白蛉(Lutzomyia shannoni Dyar)是VSNJ病毒的疑似生物传播媒介,在感染后的第1至7天以及第10天,让它们在下腹部或自行选择的部位吸食猪的血液。在大多数喂食试验期间,同时采集感染猪的血样并检测病毒的存在。吸食血液后,将白蛉饲养长达5天,并检测其VSNJ病毒感染情况。未从感染猪的血液中或从吸食这些猪血液的任何白蛉中分离出病毒。这些发现表明,家猪不符合VSNJ病毒扩增宿主的传统概念。