# Experimental infection of carpet pythons (Morelia spilota) with sunshinevirus

**Authors:** Jane P. Wesson, Mark A. O'Dea, Andrew J. Currie, Cathy M. Shilton, Timothy H. Hyndman

PMC · DOI: 10.1128/jvi.01652-25 · 2026-03-03

## TL;DR

This study shows that sunshinevirus causes neurological disease in carpet pythons and can be transmitted naturally, shedding light on its role in snake health.

## Contribution

The study experimentally confirms sunshinevirus as a causative agent of disease in carpet pythons by fulfilling Koch’s postulates.

## Key findings

- Five of six infected pythons developed neurological disease, fulfilling Koch’s postulates.
- Sunshinevirus was re-isolated from liver, kidney, and blood, indicating systemic infection.
- Infected pythons shed virus for months before showing clinical signs, suggesting prolonged asymptomatic transmission.

## Abstract

Sunshinevirus was originally isolated in 2008 from a collection of Australian pythons suffering an outbreak of neuro-respiratory disease. Sunshinevirus infection cases, including chronic asymptomatic infections, have subsequently been detected throughout Australia by PCR testing. To investigate the association between sunshinevirus infection and disease, controlled experimental infection studies in carpet pythons (Morelia spilota) were undertaken. The study aims were to determine if there was a causal relationship between sunshinevirus and disease, as well as collecting information on potential virus transmission routes, infectious doses, target organs for viral replication and pathology, and incubation period. Between August 2016 and February 2018, six pythons were inoculated with sunshinevirus, two were sham inoculated as control animals, and two were co-housed with infected animals. All animals were sampled weekly and sunshinevirus was detected in virus-inoculated animals by PCR 6–14 days post-inoculation. Five of the six virus-inoculated carpet pythons developed neuro-respiratory disease, and sunshinevirus could be re-isolated from liver and kidney tissues as well as blood. One of the co-housed pythons became infected, consistent with natural transmission. The other co-housed python remained uninfected. Clinical signs commenced 3–7 months after viral exposure. They were slow to develop, often subtle, and predominantly neurological. Histologically, there was a non-suppurative encephalomyelitis, with the most consistent finding being vacuolation and gliosis in the brain. Cytoplasmic inclusions were found in a range of predominantly epithelial tissues. Infected pythons shed infectious virus 2.5–7 months before they showed obvious clinical signs of disease and remained viremic (for several months) until euthanasia.

Australian pythons are extensively kept in captivity. Since the 1990s, native Australian snakes with neuro-respiratory signs of disease, sometimes fatal, had been presenting to veterinarians in Australia. Research conducted at Murdoch University on some of these snakes resulted in the discovery of a novel virus, now named sunshinevirus (Sunviridae). Widespread follow-up PCR testing of pythons throughout Australia linked sunshinevirus infection to both asymptomatic virus-carriers and pythons showing signs of disease. Experimental infections were conducted to determine whether sunshinevirus infection caused disease in Australian pythons. The experiments demonstrated a causal relationship by fulfilling Koch’s postulates, and 5/6 infected animals developed neurological disease. Infected pythons shed virus persistently for months, but control animals remained uninfected. Our findings provide veterinarians with valuable information for the management of sunshinevirus in zoos and private collections.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** neurological disease (MONDO:0005071)
- **Species:** Morelia spilota (taxon 51896)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neuro-respiratory disease (MESH:D012140), neurological disease (MESH:D020271), Infected (MESH:D007239), encephalomyelitis (MESH:D004679), gliosis (MESH:D005911)
- **Species:** Serpentes (snakes, infraorder) [taxon 8570], Sunshine Coast virus (no rank) [taxon 1195087], Python (genus) [taxon 37579], Morelia spilota (carpet python, species) [taxon 51896]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13011464/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13011464