Molecular Detection and Characterization of Fowl pox Virus in Cutaneous Pox in Turkeys

Authors

  • O.A. Fagbohun Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4314/

Keywords:

Pox, avipoxvirus, fowlpox virus, polymerase chain reaction, sequence analysis

Abstract

Cutaneous pox is an insidious proliferative disease characterized by the lesions such as thick scabs, small nodules, wart-like 
masses on the skin of avian species. This disease can be confused with other diseases and conditions such avian papilloma, 
infraorbital sinusitis, infectious coryza and trauma. To detect the causative agent of the lesions, samples of suspected pox lesions 
were collected from sixteen turkey poults. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and sequencing analysis were employed to detect 
the causative agents responsible for the lesions. PCR was used to amplify FPV 167, FPV 140 and thymidine kinase genes of 
avipoxvirus. Eight (50%) out of the 18 samples tested positive using PCR. Sequence analysis based on multiple sequence 
alignment and phylogenetic tree reconstruction revealed the causative agent to be fowlpox virus. Also, amino acid substitutions 
P25S, S26P, G49E, V142I and V252M in FPV 167 gene, and T78K, I79I and A92G in thymidine kinase gene were revealed to 
clearly distinguish fowlpox virus from other avipoxviruses analyzed. This study demonstrated the importance of employment of 
molecular tools PCR and sequence analyses for precise identification and characterization of causative agents of infectious 
diseases. 

Published

2024-07-09

Issue

Section

Original Article

How to Cite

Molecular Detection and Characterization of Fowl pox Virus in Cutaneous Pox in Turkeys. (2024). African Journal of Biomedical Research, 25(3), 373-378. https://doi.org/10.4314/