Abstract: | Adenovirus infection has emerged as a serious threat to the health of captive snakes and lizards (i.e., squamates), but we know relatively little about this virus' range of possible hosts, pathogenicity, modes of transmission, and sources from nature. We report the first case of adenovirus infection in the Iguanidae, a diverse family of lizards that is widely-studied and popular in captivity. We report adenovirus infections from two closely-related species of Anolis lizards (anoles) that were recently imported from wild populations in the Dominican Republic to a laboratory colony in the United States. We investigate the evolution of adenoviruses in anoles and other squamates using phylogenetic analyses of adenovirus polymerase gene sequences sampled from Anolis and a range of other vertebrate taxa.
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Author(s): | Ascher, Jill M.
Geneva, Anthony J.
Ng, Julienne
Wyatt, Jeffrey D.
Glor, Richard E.
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Date: | 2013
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Published: | PLoS One, 8(4), e60977
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Citation: | Ascher, J. M., Geneva, A. J., Ng, J., Wyatt, J. D., & Glor, R. E. (2013). Phylogenetic analyses of novel squamate adenovirus sequences in wild-caught Anolis lizards. PLoS One, 8(4), e60977. Recuperado de:
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URI: | https://bvearmb.do/handle/123456789/4058
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