Authors
Ian Hewson, Jason B Button, Brent M Gudenkauf, Benjamin Miner, Alisa L Newton, Joseph K Gaydos, Janna Wynne, Cathy L Groves, Gordon Hendler, Michael Murray, Steven Fradkin, Mya Breitbart, Elizabeth Fahsbender, Kevin D Lafferty, A Marm Kilpatrick, C Melissa Miner, Peter Raimondi, Lesanna Lahner, Carolyn S Friedman, Stephen Daniels, Martin Haulena, Jeffrey Marliave, Colleen A Burge, Morgan E Eisenlord, C Drew Harvell
Publication date
2014/12/2
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
111
Issue
48
Pages
17278-17283
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Populations of at least 20 asteroid species on the Northeast Pacific Coast have recently experienced an extensive outbreak of sea-star (asteroid) wasting disease (SSWD). The disease leads to behavioral changes, lesions, loss of turgor, limb autotomy, and death characterized by rapid degradation (“melting”). Here, we present evidence from experimental challenge studies and field observations that link the mass mortalities to a densovirus (Parvoviridae). Virus-sized material (i.e., <0.2 μm) from symptomatic tissues that was inoculated into asymptomatic asteroids consistently resulted in SSWD signs whereas animals receiving heat-killed (i.e., control) virus-sized inoculum remained asymptomatic. Viral metagenomic investigations revealed the sea star-associated densovirus (SSaDV) as the most likely candidate virus associated with tissues from symptomatic asteroids. Quantification of SSaDV during transmission …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
I Hewson, JB Button, BM Gudenkauf, B Miner… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2014