1 / 1

Hypotheses

A Study of Ranavirus in the American Toad, Anaxyrus americanus, found in the New Salem Vernal Pool, York PA Stephani Lane Department of Biological Sciences, York College of Pennsylvania. Image 2. New Salem vernal pool is located south west of York city

Télécharger la présentation

Hypotheses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Study of Ranavirus in the American Toad, Anaxyrus americanus, found in the New Salem Vernal Pool, York PA Stephani Lane Department of Biological Sciences, York College of Pennsylvania Image 2. New Salem vernal pool is located south west of York city on the south west branch of Codorus Creek (39.91483, -76.77522) Figure 1. Anaxyrus americanus, American Toad Methods http://www.theanimalfiles.com/amphibians/toads/american_toad.html Results • Introduction • Ranavirus is a double stranded DNA virus that is causing population decline in amphibian species across five continents (Miller et all. 2011, Lesbarreres et all. 2011). • Larval amphibians, including multiple species of frogs, toads and salamanders are impacted and have symptoms such as; lesions, lethargic or odd swimming and fluid accumulation under the skin (Hoverman et al. 2012). Ultimately, can cause death in less than one week. • Many species affected by Ranavirus live in the same vernal pools. Anaxyrus americanus (Fig. 1),the common toad, are different mostly in being terrestrial, nocturnal predators that have a thicker, more dry skin (Haslip et al. 2011). • The New Salem vernal pool is the only documented location of RV in central PA. Very little is known about RV here, especially the impact on A. americanus • Samples Collected • Dip net protocol • May 5th- July 2nd 2013 • n(collected)= 101 • n(sampled)= 63 DNA Extraction & Quantification Confirmation of amphibian DNA using the 12S RNA gene in PCR • Conclusions • A. americanustadpoles had lower prevalence of RV than the spotted salamander, suggesting that toads are not being as significantly affected • RV prevalence was highest in the last two weeks of the developmental period of A. americanus larvae • No visible signs or death were reported in toads despite individuals having the virus present. • Quantitative PCR is much more effective in determining positive samples for Ranavirus. This should be the standard testing method for the detection in future studies. • Standard PCR for MCP (Fig. 3) • To test for the Ranavirus major capsid protein (MCP) • Negative Control= H2O • Positive Control= MCP Plasmid Objectives • qPCR for MCP • To confirm +/- for RV • Positive if Ct (threshold cycle) value was higher than negative H2O (Fig. 4) • To determine the prevalence of RV in larval A. americanus to compare prevalence to other species in the amphibian community • To evaluate prevalence over the development of larval A. americanus until metamorphosis • To compare the effectiveness of two molecular techniques used to identify individuals infected with RV (standard and quantitative PCR) Figure 3. Standard PCR amplification of the MCP gene to identify Ranavirus infection in Anaxyrus americanus. 1% agarose gel with a 100 bp ladder. Plasmid (+ control) in lane two (576 bp). BA 106 and BA 110 positive for RV. Literature Cited Haislip, N.A., Gray, M.J., Hoverman, J.T., Miller, D.L. Development and disease: how susceptibility to an emerging pathogen changes through anuran development. PLoS ONE [serial online] 6(7). Hoverman, J.T, Gray, Gray, M.J., Miller, D.L., Haislip, N.A. 2012. Widespread occurrence of Ranavirus in pond-breeding amphibian populations. EcoHealth [serial online] 9:36-48. Lesbarrers, D., Balseiro, A., Brunner, J., Chinchar, V.G., Duffus, A., Kerby, J., Miller, D.L., Robert, J., Schock, D.M., Waltzek, T., Grey, M.J. 2011. Ranavirus: past, present and future. Biology Letters. Miller, D., Gray, M., Storfer, A. 2011. Ecopathology of Ranavirus infecting amphibians. Viruses [serial online]3:2351-2373. • Hypotheses • H1: A. americanus will have a lower prevalence of Ranavirus than the spotted salamander, Ambystoma maculatum. • H2: Prevalence will be highest at the end of their developmental period, close to metamorphosis. • H3: Quantitative PCR (qPCR) will have a higher number of positive samples. Acknowledgements I would like to thank Dr. Hagerty for her endless guidance and support. I would also like to thank Dr. Higa, Thomas Brigman and Carrie Reall for their assistance in my research. Ladder Plasmid Negative BA 010 BA 106 BA 111 BA 110 BA 500

More Related