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Meningoencephalitis in a common minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata associated with Brucella pinnipedialis and gamma-herpesvirus infection

Nicholas J. Davison, MP Dagleish, Mariel ten Doeschate, Jakub Muchowski, L. L. Perrett, Mara Rocchi, Adrian M. Whatmore, Andrew Brownlow

2021Diseases of Aquatic Organisms13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fatal marine Brucella infections with histologic lesions specific to the central nervous system (CNS), known as neurobrucellosis, have been described in 5 species of odontocete cetaceans in the UK: striped dolphins Stenella coeruleoalba, Atlantic white-sided dolphins Lagenorhynchus acutus, short-beaked common dolphins Delphinus delphis, long-finned pilot whale Globicephala melas and Sowerby's beaked whale Mesoplodon bidens. To date, these CNS lesions have only been associated with Brucella ceti ST26 and not with B. pinnipedialis, which is rarely isolated from cetaceans and, although commonly found in various seal species, has never been associated with any pathology. This paper describes the first report of neurobrucellosis in a common minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata which was associated with the isolation of Brucella pinnipedialis ST24 and co-infection with Balaenoptera acutorostrata gamma-herpesvirus 2. This is the first report of neurobrucellosis in any species of mysticete and the first report of Brucella pinnipedialis in association with any pathology in any species of marine mammal, which may be due to co-infection with a herpesvirus, as these are known to be associated with immunosuppression.

Topics & Concepts

Minke whaleBalaenopteraBiologyDelphinus delphisMeningoencephalitisBrucellosisZoologyFisheryWhaleVirologyBrucella: diagnosis, epidemiology, treatmentGalectins and Cancer BiologyAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology
Meningoencephalitis in a common minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata associated with Brucella pinnipedialis and gamma-herpesvirus infection | Litcius