Abstract
Summary
Serologic tests designed to demonstrate a relationship between polyhedral cytoplasmic viruses from amphibia and African swine fever virus indicated no cross-reactivity between the agents using techniques that revealed clean homologous activity. A 3000 pig LD100 of ASFV injected into toads susceptible to FV1 and FV3 did not cause death. Large doses of FV1 (greater than 1000 toad LD50) neither produced disease signs nor stimulated the production of antibodies against ASFV in swine. The data indicate that cytoplasmic frog viruses and ASFV, which have many common properties, are not serologically related and do not share common host range.
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