• Title/Summary/Keyword: FFN cells

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Propagation of lymphocystis disease virus (LCDV) in the FIN cell line originated from olive flounder Paralichthys olivaceus fin

  • Hossain, Mosharrof;Kim, Wi-Sik;Jung, Sung-Ju;Oh, Myung-Joo
    • Journal of fish pathology
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.47-51
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    • 2011
  • The present study demonstrated lymphocystis disease virus (LCDV) propagation through cytopathic effects (CPE) formation and LCDV detection in olive flounder fin (FFN) cells by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and fluorescent antibody technique (FAT) methods. Tissue filtrates from the cluster cells produced CPE in FFN cells, which initially cells became enlarged and gradually underwent fusion en masse. Infectivity of culture grown LCDV using the FFN cells reached $10^{2.3}$ $TCID_{50}$/ml at 4 days post infection and the highest titer was measured $10^{6.5}$ $TCID_{50}$/ml at 12 days. The viral DNA was detected in the cell culture supernatants showing CPE and the CPE cells by PCR. Antigen specific strong fluorescence reacting with monoclonal antibody against the virus revealed the presence of viral antigen in the cytoplasm of infected FFN cells. These results suggest that the FFN cell line originated from the olive flounder has a susceptibility of the LCDV.

Characterization of an isolated reovirus from the paradise fish Macropodus opercularis imported from Southeast Asia (동남아시아로부터 수입된 paradise fish Macropodus opercularis로부터 분리한 reovirus의 특성)

  • Kim, Wi-Sik;Kim, Soo-Jin;Kim, Jeong-Ho;Jung, Sung-Ju;Kim, Do-Hyung;Oh, Myung-Joo
    • Journal of fish pathology
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.335-342
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    • 2010
  • In 2008, mass mortality was observed in paradise fish Macropodus opercularis which was imported from Indonesia. PCR of these fish found positive for megalocytivirus and Mycobacterium sp., while an unidentified virus was culture-isolated using CHSE-214 cells. In the present study, we investigated characterization of the unidentified virus and its pathogenicity to determine whether the virus was the causative agent of the mass mortality of paradise fish. The unidentified virus induced cytopathic effect (CPE) with syncytia in CHSE-214 and other fish cells, BF-2, GF, SSN-1, FSP and FFN. The virus was resistant against treatments with IUdR, chloroform, acidity at pH 3, basicity at pH 11 and high temperature at $56^{\circ}C$ for 3h. By electron microscopy, the viral particles were spherical having a double capsid structure with approximately 65 nm in external diameter. Viral genome was composed of at least 10-segmented RNA with sizes ranging from 0.7 kb to 3.6 kb. Based on these characters, this virus can be classified into family Reoviridae. This reovirus did not cause any mortality in an artificial experiment conducted by injecting the virus to paradise fish. This indicates that the reovirus is not only responsible for the mass mortality of paradise fish in 2008.