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Volume 10, Number 12, December 2004

Nonsusceptibility of Primate Cells to Taura Syndrome Virus

Carlos R. Pantoja,* Solangel A. Navarro,* Jaime Naranjo,* Donald V. Lightner,* Charles P. Gerba*
*University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA

 
 
Figure 3A.
Figure 3B.
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Figure 3. Histologic section through the anterior gastric chamber of a moribund juvenile Litopenaeus vannamei that was injected with an inoculum prepared with tissue cell culture media from BGMK cells exposed to Taura syndrome virus (TSV) (day 7 postexposure). A) The arrows point to a portion of cuticular epithelium displaying diagnostic acute-phase TSV lesions (hematoxylin/eosin-phloxin stain; 50x). B) The dashed arrows point to a portion of the stomach epithelium from the same shrimp, where digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled TSV-specific gene probes were reacted by in situ hybridization (ISH), resulting in the deposition of a black precipitate on areas where the probe hybridized with target TSV (Bismarck Brown counterstain; 50x).

 

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This page last reviewed November 9, 2004

Emerging Infectious Diseases Journal
National Center for Infectious Diseases
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention