Fibropapillomatosis is a neoplastic disease that is commonly found in the green turtles Chelonia mydas in tropical and subtropical regions of the world. In the current project, juvenile green turtles were captured with large-mesh tangle nets in the Indian River Lagoon and on nearshore reefs of Indian River County, Florida, USA, in 1998 and 1999. The purpose of the study was to determine the relationship between the severity of the disease and the general health of green turtles as indicated by blood parameters. All turtles were measured and examined, and the overall severity of the disease was rated by the size, number, and location of external fibropapilloma tumors. Hematocrit, total protein, and hemoglobin concentration were measured and compared with tumor scores (tumor severity appraisal). As the tumor score increased, the blood parameters of turtles decreased; for instance, the percentage of decrease in hematocrit for mildly afflicted, moderately afflicted, and severely afflicted groups were 2.6, 18.3, and 45.5%, respectively. Severely afflicted turtles suffered from anemia, while individuals with mild affliction did not.
A recently developed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to assess exposure of Florida wild green turtles Chelonia mydas to LETV, the herpesvirus associated with lung-eye-trachea disease (LETD). Plasma samples from 329 wild juvenile green turtles netted in the Indian River lagoon, along the Sebastian reef, or in the Trident basin (Indian River and Brevard Counties, Florida) were tested by ELISA for the presence of antibodies to LETV. Plasma samples from 180 wild juvenile green turtles were tested from these study sites to compare the prevalence of anti-LETV antibodies. While some plasma samples from each site contained anti-LETV antibodies (confirmed by Western blot analysis), plasma samples collected from the Indian River lagoon had statistically higher optical density values measured in the ELISA. No statistical differences were observed when these same plasma samples were analyzed for changes in the level of anti-LETV antibodies over 3 years (1997, 1998, and 1999). To explore the relationship between anti-LETV antibodies and fibropapillomatosis (FP), plasma from 133 green turtles scored for fibropapilloma tumor severity were tested by ELISA. There was no correlation between tumor severity and the presence of antibodies against LETV. Additional plasma samples collected from 16 tagged green turtles captured and sampled more than once (recaptures) were also tested to monitor antibody levels to LETV relative to the FP status of individual turtles over time. Again there was no clear relationship between FP tumor status and the presence of antibodies to LETV. Finally, ELISA tests on plasma from 13 nesting female turtles (9 green and 4 loggerhead) revealed high levels of anti-LETV antibodies in 11 individuals, including 2 loggerhead turtles. These results provide strong evidence that wild Florida green turtle populations at these 3 study sites are exposed to LETV or a closely related virus and that loggerhead turtles may be exposed as well. Based on a cutoff optical density value of 0.310, 71 out of the 329 wild Florida green turtles tested were seropositive for LETV antibodies (seroprevalence = 21.6%). In addition, no relationship between FP tumor severity or status and the presence of anti-LETV antibodies was found, further supporting the hypothesis that LETV and the FP-associated herpesvirus (FPHV) are separate infections of marine turtles.KEY WORDS: Lung-eye-trachea disease · LETD · LETD-associated herpesvirus · LETV · Green turtle · Chelonia mydas · Chelonian herpesviruses · Antibodies · ELISA
Resale or republication not permitted without written consent of the publisherDis Aquat Org 47: [159][160][161][162][163][164][165][166][167] 2001 lomatosis-associated herpesvirus (FPHV) has been detected in > 95% of fibropapillomas and in all tumor preparations used to experimentally induce fibropapillomatosis (FP) in healthy turtles (Herbst et al. 1999, Lackovich et al. 1999. However, neither LETV nor FPHV has been proven to be the epizootiologic agents of the marine turtle diseases with whi...
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