Growing Pearl Virus: A New Way to Study Temperature and UV Effects

JapanSun Jan 26 2025
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Have you heard about Pinctada birnavirus (PiBV)? This virus causes a disease called summer atrophy in pearl oysters, mainly affecting young oysters and causing abnormalities in adults. First spotted in Japan in 2019, studying this virus has been tough due to the lack of suitable cell lines. But don't worry, scientists have found a clever way to grow the virus outside of a living organism, using mantle tissue, which is where the virus likes to hang out.
By changing the temperature of the tissue culture, scientists found that PiBV grows best at 25°C (that's like a nice summer day). Too cold at 15°C or too hot at 32. 5°C, and the virus doesn't grow much at all. Plus, they discovered that PiBV can't handle strong UV radiation. After a certain level of UV, the virus just can't grow anymore. Isn't that fascinating? This new method of growing PiBV is super helpful for scientists. It lets them do experiments and learn more about the virus without harming live oysters. Pretty neat, right?
https://localnews.ai/article/growing-pearl-virus-a-new-way-to-study-temperature-and-uv-effects-d80990a4

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