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Purification of infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV) in species of marine shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei in the State of Ceará.

In Brazil, shrimp farming has been developed most intensely in the Northeast Region. Recently, however, exporters have become concerned over the appearance of Infectious Myonecrosis (IMN), the etiological agent of which is a virus called Infectious Myonecrosis Virus (IMNV). Although IMNV has been characterized extensively, purification methods are complicated to reproduce and very expensive. The objective of this study was to purify the IMNV virus using an easy reproductive method and to produce anti-IMNV antibodies to be used in diagnostic methods. Shrimp samples showing symptoms of IMN obtained from two aquaculture farms in Ceará were used for this purpose. IMNV-positive shrimps were macerated in phosphate buffer, pH 7.5, enriched with antioxidants, clarified with chloroform and the supernatant was submitted to differential centrifugation, precipitated using PEG and NaCl and finally loaded on a discontinuous gradient of sucrose. Purified IMNV was submitted to RT-PCR and electrophoresis either in agarose gel or SDS-PAGE, which revealed RNA and protein bands, characteristic of IMNV. IMNV induced humoral immune response in Swiss mice when administered subcutaneously. Anti-IMNV antibodies were identified by ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) and Western blotting methods and produced a response against purified IMNV and the crude extract obtained from the infected shrimp. However, antibodies specific to the crude extract obtained from uninfected shrimp were not detected. This is the first report of IMNV having been purified in Brazil and the first time that specific antibodies against IMNV proteins have been produced. These results suggest that easy methods can be developed to produce specific antiserum for viral diagnosis on a large scale.

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