Frances M.D. Gulland; Linda Lowenstine; Don King; Terry Spraker; Laurie J.
Gage
The Marine Mammal Center, Marine Headlands, Sausalito, CA; Department of
Pathology, Microbiology & Immunology, University of California at Davis, CA; College of
Veterinary Medicine, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO; Zoological Society of San Diego,
CA
Between January 1990 and August 1995, 382 harbor seal pups (Phoca
vitulina richardsii) that stranded live along the central and northern California coast died
during rehabilitation at The Marine Mammal Center, Sausalito, California. 162 of these were
examined histopathologically. In 33% (54/162) of these, intranuclear inclusion bodies suggestive
of herpesvirus infection were observed in adrenal cortical cells and hepatocytes. Affected animals
died between 0 and 62 days following admission to the Center. The majority of cases occurred
between mid-April and mid-May in each year. Prevalence of inclusion bodies did not differ between
the sexes (29/96 males, 25/66 females), but was greatest in pups that stranded in Monterey county
(24/33, 73%) and lowest in pups that stranded in Humboldt county (1/13, 7.7%). Clinical signs of
infection varied from chronic weight loss to sudden death. On post mortem examination, 19 of the
54 affected pups showed no gross lesions other than adrenocortical atrophy. Histologic examination
revealed acute multifocal adrenocortical and hepatic necrosis, with amphophilic, smudgy
intranuclear inclusions typical of herpesvirus infections. Syncytia were sometimes present in the
adrenals but not in the liver. The other 35 pups had a variety of lesions including, in decreasing
order of frequency: omphalitis, suppurative bronchopneumonia, meningitis, enterocolitis, cutaneous
abscesses and septic arthritis. These animals had similar inclusions in adrenal cortical cells and
hepatocytes. Transmission electron microscopic examination of adrenal glands with inclusion bodies
revealed icosahedral viral particles, about 100 nm in diameter, both with and without outer
envelopes. Primary adrenal cell cultures were established from harbor seals, and inoculated with
adrenal gland homogenate from animals with inclusion bodies. Cytopathic effect (cell rounding and
plaque formation) was observed in the primary cell lines, but could not be transmitted to Vero
cell lines. These data suggest a herpesvirus is prevalent in wild harbor seal populations in
central California. Herpesviruses typically display latency and persistence of infection, with
reactivation of infection occurring as a consequence of a variety of immunosuppressive events. It
is likely that the virus infecting these harbor seals possesses these properties, reactivation of
infection potentially resulting from events such as maternal separation, over-crowding,
disturbance by man or his pets, or infection with bacterial pathogens.