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Taura syndrome virus (TSV) in Thailand and its relationship to TSV in China and the Americas
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Document Title
Taura syndrome virus (TSV) in Thailand and its relationship to TSV in China and the Americas
Author
Nielsen L, Sang-oum W, Cheevadhanarak S, Flegel TW
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Mahidol University; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Center Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology (BIOTEC); King Mongkuts University of Technology North Bangkok; King Mongkuts University of Technology Thonburi
Type
Article
Source Title
DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS
ISSN
0177-5103
Year
2005
Volume
63
Issue
2-3
Page
101-106
Open Access
Bronze
Publisher
INTER-RESEARCH
DOI
10.3354/dao063101
Format
Abstract
The cultivation of exotic Penaeus vannamei in Thailand began on a very limited scale in the late 1990s, but a Thai government ban on the cultivation of P. monodon in freshwater areas in 2000 led many Thai shrimp farmers to shift to cultivation of P. vannamei. Alarmed by the possibility of Taura syndrome virus (TSV) introduction, the Thai Department of Fisheries required that imported stocks of P. vannamei be certified free of TSV by RT-PCR (Reverse Trasciption Polymerase Chain Reaction) testing. During the interval of allowed importation, over 150 000 broodstock shrimp were imported, 67% of these from China and Taiwan. Despite the safeguards, TSV outbreaks occurred and we confirmed the first outbreak by RT-PCR in early 2003. This resulted in a governmental ban on all shrimp broodstock imports from February 2003, but TSV outbreaks have continued, possibly due to original introductions or to the continued illegal importation of stocks. To determine the origin of the TSV in Thailand, the viral coat protein gene VP1 was amplified by RT-PCR from several shrimp specimens found positive for TSV by RT-PCR from January to November 2003. These included 7 samples from P. vannamei disease outbreaks in Thailand, 3 other non-diseased shrimp samples from Thailand and Burma and 6 samples including P. vannamei and P. japonicus from China. Comparison revealed that the Thai, Burmese and Chinese TSV types formed a clade distinct from a clade of TSV types from the Americas.
Keyword
phylogeny | Taura syndrome virus | Thailand | TSV | VPI
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WOS