Harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) are the most prevalent cetaceans in the North Sea. The fecal viral flora of 21 harbour porpoises stranded along the Dutch coastline was analyzed by a metagenomics approach. Sequences of a novel cetacean mastadenovirus, designated harbour porpoise adenovirus 1 (HpAdV-1), were detected. The sequence of a 23-kbp genomic region, spanning the conserved late region, was determined using primer walking. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that HpAdV-1 is most closely related to bottlenose dolphin adenovirus and clusters with Cetartiodactyla adenoviruses. The prevalence of HpAdV-1 was low (2.6%) based on targeted PCR-screening of the intestinal contents of 151 harbour porpoises stranded between 2010 and 2013.

doi.org/10.1007/s00705-017-3310-8, hdl.handle.net/1765/98520
Archives of Virology
Department of Virology

van Beurden, S.J. (Steven J.), IJsseldijk, L.L. (Lonneke L.), van de Bildt, M., Begeman, L., Wellehan, J. F. X., Waltzek, T., … Penzes, J.J. (Judit J.). (2017). A novel cetacean adenovirus in stranded harbour porpoises from the North Sea: detection and molecular characterization. Archives of Virology, 1–6. doi:10.1007/s00705-017-3310-8