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J Gen Virol 75 (1994), 2151-2155; DOI 10.1099/0022-1317-75-9-2151
© 1994 Society for General Microbiology

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Experimental infection of mink with bovine spongiform encephalopathy

Mark M. Robinson1,2,, William J. Hadlow3, Tami P. Huff1, Gerald A. H. Wells4, Michael Dawson4, Richard F. Marsh5 and John R. Gorham1,2,

1 USDA-ARS Animal Disease Research Unit, Bustad 337, WSU, Pullman, Washington 99164-7030
2 Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Pathology, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164-7040
3 908 South Third Street, Hamilton, Montana 59840-2924, U.S.A.
4 Central Veterinary Laboratory, New Haw, Addlestone, Surrey KT15 3NB, U.K.
and5 Department of Animal Health and Biomedical Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, U.S.A.

To determine whether the aetiological agent of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) is pathogenic for mink, standard dark mink were inoculated with coded homogenates of bovine brain from the U.K. Two homogenates were from cows affected with BSE. The third was from a cow that came from a farm with no history of having had BSE or having been fed ruminant-derived, rendered by-products, the proposed vehicle for introduction of the BSE agent. Each homogenate was inoculated intracerebrally into separate groups of mink and a pool of the three was fed to a fourth group. Signs of neurological disease appeared in mink an average of 12 months after intracerebral inoculation and 15 months after feeding. Decreased appetite, lethargy and mild to moderate pelvic limb ataxia were the predominant clinical signs, quite unlike the classic clinical picture of transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME). Microscopic changes in brain sections of most affected mink were those of a scrapie-like spongiform encephalopathy. Vacuolar change in grey matter neuropil was accompanied by prominent astrocytosis. Varying greatly in severity from one mink to another, the degenerative changes occurred in the cerebral cortex, dorsolateral gyri of the frontal lobe, corpus striatum, diencephalon and brainstem. Although resembling TME, the encephalopathy was distinguishable from it by less extensive changes in the cerebral cortex, by more severe changes in the caudal brainstem and by sparing of the hippocampus. The results of this study extend the experimental host range of the BSE agent and demonstrate for the first time the experimental oral infection of mink with a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy agent from a naturally infected ruminant species.

Received 25 February 1994; accepted 20 April 1994.


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