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Virol J. 2008; 5: 88.
Published online 2008 July 31. doi: 10.1186/1743-422X-5-88.
PMCID: PMC2546392
Recovery of divergent avian bornaviruses from cases of proventricular dilatation disease: Identification of a candidate etiologic agent
Amy L Kistler,corresponding author1 Ady Gancz,2 Susan Clubb,3 Peter Skewes-Cox,1,6 Kael Fischer,1 Katherine Sorber,1 Charles Y Chiu,1,4 Avishai Lublin,5 Sara Mechani,5 Yigal Farnoushi,5 Alexander Greninger,1 Christopher C Wen,6 Scott B Karlene,7 Don Ganem,1 and Joseph L DeRisi1
1Departments of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Medicine, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and University of California, San Francisco, 94143, USA
2The Exotic Clinic, Herzlyia, 46875, Israel
3Rainforest Clinic for Birds and Exotics, Loxahatchee, FL, 33470, USA
4Division of Infectious Diseases, University of California, San Francisco, 94143, USA
5Division of Avian & Fish Diseases, Kimron Veterinary Institute, Bet Dagan, 50250, Israel
6Biological and Medical Informatics Program, University of California, San Francisco, 94143, USA
7Lahser Interspecies Research Foundation, Bloomfield Hills, MI, 48302, USA
corresponding authorCorresponding author.
Amy L Kistler: amy/at/derisilab.ucsf.edu; Ady Gancz: ady/at/exoticdoc.co.il; Susan Clubb: SusanClubb/at/aol.com; Peter Skewes-Cox: peter/at/derisilab.ucsf.edu; Kael Fischer: kael.fischer/at/gmail.com; Katherine Sorber: katherine/at/derisilab.ucsf.edu; Charles Y Chiu: charles.chiu/at/ucsf.edu; Avishai Lublin: lublina/at/int.gov.il; Sara Mechani: sarame/at/moag.gov.il; Yigal Farnoushi: pop5552003/at/yahoo.com; Alexander Greninger: alexander.greninger/at/ucsf.edu; Christopher C Wen: christopher.wen/at/ucsf.edu; Scott B Karlene: sbkarlene/at/aol.com; Don Ganem: ganem/at/cgl.ucsf.edu; Joseph L DeRisi: joe/at/derisilab.ucsf.edu
Received June 30, 2008; Accepted July 31, 2008.
Abstract

Background
Proventricular dilatation disease (PDD) is a fatal disorder threatening domesticated and wild psittacine birds worldwide. It is characterized by lymphoplasmacytic infiltration of the ganglia of the central and peripheral nervous system, leading to central nervous system disorders as well as disordered enteric motility and associated wasting. For almost 40 years, a viral etiology for PDD has been suspected, but to date no candidate etiologic agent has been reproducibly linked to the disease.

Results
Analysis of 2 PDD case-control series collected independently on different continents using a pan-viral microarray revealed a bornavirus hybridization signature in 62.5% of the PDD cases (5/8) and none of the controls (0/8). Ultra high throughput sequencing was utilized to recover the complete viral genome sequence from one of the virus-positive PDD cases. This revealed a bornavirus-like genome organization for this agent with a high degree of sequence divergence from all prior bornavirus isolates. We propose the name avian bornavirus (ABV) for this agent. Further specific ABV PCR analysis of an additional set of independently collected PDD cases and controls yielded a significant difference in ABV detection rate among PDD cases (71%, n = 7) compared to controls (0%, n = 14) (P = 0.01; Fisher's Exact Test). Partial sequence analysis of a total of 16 ABV isolates we have now recovered from these and an additional set of cases reveals at least 5 distinct ABV genetic subgroups.

Conclusion
These studies clearly demonstrate the existence of an avian reservoir of remarkably diverse bornaviruses and provide a compelling candidate in the search for an etiologic agent of PDD.