Michal Voorbergen-Laarman
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michal Voorbergen-Laarman.
Journal of General Virology | 2010
S. J. van Beurden; Alex Bossers; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; O.L.M. Haenen; Sander A. Peters; Marleen H. C. Abma-Henkens; Ben Peeters; Peter J. M. Rottier; Marc Y. Engelsma
Eel herpesvirus or anguillid herpesvirus 1 (AngHV1) frequently causes disease in freshwater eels. The complete genome sequence of AngHV1 and its taxonomic position within the family Alloherpesviridae were determined. Shotgun sequencing revealed a 249 kbp genome including an 11 kbp terminal direct repeat that contains 7 of the 136 predicted protein-coding open reading frames. Twelve of these genes are conserved among other members of the family Alloherpesviridae and another 28 genes have clear homologues in cyprinid herpesvirus 3. Phylogenetic analyses based on amino acid sequences of five conserved genes, including the ATPase subunit of the terminase, confirm the position of AngHV1 within the family Alloherpesviridae, where it is most closely related to the cyprinid herpesviruses. Our analyses support a recent proposal to subdivide the family Alloherpesviridae into two sister clades, one containing AngHV1 and the cyprinid herpesviruses and the other containing Ictalurid herpesvirus 1 and the ranid herpesviruses.
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2012
Steven J. van Beurden; M.Y. Engelsma; Ineke Roozenburg; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; Peter W. van Tulden; Sonja Kerkhoff; Anton P. van Nieuwstadt; Aart Davidse; O.L.M. Haenen
Diseases are an important cause of losses and decreased production rates in freshwater eel farming, and have been suggested to play a contributory role in the worldwide decline in wild freshwater eel stocks. Three commonly detected pathogenic viruses of European eel Anguilla anguilla are the aquabirnavirus eel virus European (EVE), the rhabdovirus eel virus European X (EVEX), and the alloherpesvirus anguillid herpesvirus 1 (AngHV1). In general, all 3 viruses cause a nonspecific haemorrhagic disease with increased mortality rates. This review provides an overview of the current knowledge on the aetiology, prevalence, clinical signs and gross pathology of these 3 viruses. Reported experimental infections showed the temperature dependency and potential pathogenicity of these viruses for eels and other fish species. In addition to the published literature, an overview of the isolation of pathogenic viruses from wild and farmed A. anguilla in the Netherlands during the past 2 decades is given. A total of 249 wild A. anguilla, 39 batches of glass eels intended for farming purposes, and 239 batches of farmed European eels were necropsied and examined virologically. AngHV1 was isolated from wild yellow and silver A. anguilla from the Netherlands from 1998 until the present, while EVEX was only found sporadically, and EVE was never isolated. In farmed A. anguilla AngHV1 was also the most commonly isolated virus, followed by EVE and EVEX.
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2013
M.Y. Engelsma; Keith Way; Melanie J. Dodge; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; Valentina Panzarin; Miriam Abbadi; Mansour El-Matbouli; Helle Frank Skall; Søren Kahns; David M. Stone
Cyprinid herpesvirus 3 (CyHV-3) or koi herpesvirus (KHV) is a devastating virus of carp. Using generic primers for the DNA polymerase and the major capsid protein genes of cyprinid herpesviruses, nucleotide sequences divergent from previously described CyHV-3 were obtained. At least 3 novel groups of putative CyHV-3-like viruses were identified, sharing 95 to 98% nucleotide identity with CyHV-3 strains. Carp carrying the CyHV-3 variants did not show clinical signs consistent with CyHV-3 infection and originated from locations with no actual CyHV-3 outbreaks. These strains might represent low- or non-pathogenic variants of CyHV-3.
Journal of Fish Diseases | 2016
A Gittenberger; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; M.Y. Engelsma
The Wadden Sea is an extensive wetland area, recognized as UNESCO world heritage site of international importance. Since the mid-1990s, the invasive Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas (Thunberg 1793) population in the area has grown exponentially, having a distinct impact on the ecosystem. The recent spread of the emerging oyster pathogen Ostreid herpesvirus OsHV-1 μVar worldwide and specifically in the oyster culture areas in the south of the Netherlands raised the question whether the virus may also be present in the Wadden Sea. In the summer of 2012 juvenile Pacific oysters were collected from five locations in the Dutch Wadden Sea. The virus was shown to be present in three of the five locations by real-time PCR and sequencing. It was concluded that OsHV-1 μVar has settled itself in Pacific oyster reefs in the Wadden Sea. These results and the recent discoveries of OsHV-1 microvariants in Australia and Korea indicate that OsHV-1 μVar and related variants might be more widespread than can be deduced from current literature. In particular in regions with no commercial oyster culture, similar to the Wadden Sea, the virus may go undetected as wild beds with mixed age classes hamper the detection of mortality among juvenile oysters.
Journal of Virological Methods | 2011
Steven J. van Beurden; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; Ineke Roozenburg; Annette S. Boerlage; O.L.M. Haenen; Marc Y. Engelsma
Eel virus European X (EVEX) is one of the most common pathogenic viruses in farmed and wild European eel (Anguilla anguilla) in the Netherlands. The virus causes a hemorrhagic disease resulting in increased mortality rates. Cell culture and antibody-based detection of EVEX are laborious and time consuming. Therefore, a two-step real-time reverse transcriptase (RT-)PCR assay was developed for rapid detection of EVEX. Primers and probe for the assay were designed based on a sequence of the RNA polymerase or L gene of EVEX. The real-time RT-PCR assay was validated both for use with SYBR Green chemistry and for use with a TaqMan probe. The assay is sensitive, specific, repeatable, efficient and has a high r²-value. The real-time RT-PCR assay was further evaluated by testing field samples of European eels from the Netherlands, which were positive or negative for EVEX by virus isolation followed by an indirect fluorescent antibody test. The real-time RT-PCR assay allows rapid, sensitive and specific laboratory detection of EVEX in RNA extracts from 10% eel organ suspensions and cell cultures with cytopathic effects, and is a valuable contribution to the diagnosis of viral diseases of eel.
Journal of Invertebrate Pathology | 2013
Noèlia Carrasco; Ineke Roozenburg; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; Naoki Itoh; M.Y. Engelsma
Nocardia crassostreae, the causative agent of Pacific oyster nocardiosis (PON), is a Gram-positive actinomycete bacterium associated with Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) mortalities. Oysters infected with this bacterium have been reported previously from the west coast of North America and Japan. More recently, N. crassostreae was reported in oyster culture areas in the Netherlands. In this study, a sensitive real-time PCR for specific detection of N. crassostreae was developed, and the intra-species divergence of N. crassostreae from different geographical locations was studied. The 16S-23S rRNA intergenic spacer (ITS) region of N. crassostreae was sequenced for a number of infected oysters originating from the Netherlands, Japan and Canada. The sequence analyses showed an absence of genetic variation in the ITS region between N. crassostreae from different geographical locations. Based on these ITS sequences a species-specific and highly sensitive SYBR Green real-time PCR assay was developed to facilitate detection of N. crassostreae in oyster tissue. To evaluate this new detection tool for N. crassostreae a preliminary validation was carried out and real-time PCR results were compared with other detection methods (histology, conventional PCR and bacterial isolation) using field samples from Lake Grevelingen, the Netherlands. The genetic homogeneity in the ITS region between N. crassostreae from different geographical locations might be explained by the recent spread of the organism via the international trade in Pacific oysters for aquaculture purposes. However, the lack of genetic variation could also suggest that N. crassostreae is a genetically monomorphic species.
Journal of Fish Diseases | 2016
S. J. van Beurden; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; Ineke Roozenburg; J van Tellingen; O.L.M. Haenen; M.Y. Engelsma
Anguillid herpesvirus 1 (AngHV1) causes a haemorrhagic disease with increased mortality in wild and farmed European eel, Anguilla anguilla (L.) and Japanese eel Anguilla japonica, Temminck & Schlegel). Detection of AngHV1 is currently based on virus isolation in cell culture, antibody-based typing assays or conventional PCR. We developed, optimized and concisely validated a diagnostic TaqMan probe based real-time PCR assay for the detection of AngHV1. The primers and probe target AngHV1 open reading frame 57, encoding the capsid protease and scaffold protein. Compared to conventional PCR, the developed real-time PCR is faster, less labour-intensive and has a reduced risk of cross-contamination. The real-time PCR assay was shown to be analytically sensitive and specific and has a high repeatability, efficiency and r(2) -value. The diagnostic performance of the assay was determined by testing 10% w/v organ suspensions and virus cultures from wild and farmed European eels from the Netherlands by conventional and real-time PCR. The developed real-time PCR assay is a useful tool for the rapid and sensitive detection of AngHV1 in 10% w/v organ suspensions from wild and farmed European eels.
Emerging microbes & infections | 2018
Bernardo Saucedo; Joseph Hughes; Annemarieke Spitzen-van der Sluijs; Natasja Kruithof; Marc Schills; Jolianne M. Rijks; Mónica Jacinto-Maldonado; Nicolás M. Suárez; O.L.M. Haenen; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; Jan van den Broek; Maarten J. Gilbert; Andrea Gröne; Steven J. van Beurden; M. Hélène Verheije
Ranaviruses are pathogenic viruses for poikilothermic vertebrates worldwide. The identification of a common midwife toad virus (CMTV) associated with massive die-offs in water frogs (Pelophylax spp.) in the Netherlands has increased awareness for emerging viruses in amphibians in the country. Complete genome sequencing of 13 ranavirus isolates collected from ten different sites in the period 2011–2016 revealed three CMTV groups present in distinct geographical areas in the Netherlands. Phylogenetic analysis showed that emerging viruses from the northern part of the Netherlands belonged to CMTV-NL group I. Group II and III viruses were derived from the animals located in the center-east and south of the country, and shared a more recent common ancestor to CMTV-amphibian associated ranaviruses reported in China, Italy, Denmark, and Switzerland. Field monitoring revealed differences in water frog host abundance at sites where distinct ranavirus groups occur; with ranavirus-associated deaths, host counts decreasing progressively, and few juveniles found in the north where CMTV-NL group I occurs but not in the south with CMTV-NL group III. Investigation of tandem repeats of coding genes gave no conclusive information about phylo-geographical clustering, while genetic analysis of the genomes revealed truncations in 17 genes across CMTV-NL groups II and III compared to group I. Further studies are needed to elucidate the contribution of these genes as well as environmental variables to explain the observed differences in host abundance.
Genome Announcements | 2017
Bernardo Saucedo; Joseph Hughes; Steven J. van Beurden; Nicolás M. Suárez; O.L.M. Haenen; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; Andrea Gröne; Marja Kik
ABSTRACT Frog virus 3 was isolated from a strawberry poison frog (Oophaga pumilio) imported from Nicaragua via Germany to the Netherlands, and its complete genome sequence was determined. Frog virus 3 isolate Op/2015/Netherlands/UU3150324001 is 107,183 bp long and has a nucleotide similarity of 98.26% to the reference Frog virus 3 isolate.
Journal of Fish Diseases | 2016
O.L.M. Haenen; H. Schuetze; Michael Cieslak; S Oldenburg; M A H Spierenburg; I. Roozenburg-Hengst; Michal Voorbergen-Laarman; M.Y. Engelsma; Niels Jørgen Olesen