| Literature DB >> 27530456 |
Charlie Cador1,2, Séverine Hervé3,4, Mathieu Andraud5,4, Stéphane Gorin3,4, Frédéric Paboeuf6,4, Nicolas Barbier3,4, Stéphane Quéguiner3,4, Céline Deblanc3,4, Gaëlle Simon3,4, Nicolas Rose5,4.
Abstract
A transmission experiment involving 5-week-old specific-pathogen-free (SPF) piglets, with (MDA(+)) or without maternally-derived antibodies (MDA(-)), was carried out to evaluate the impact of passive immunity on the transmission of a swine influenza A virus (swIAV). In each group (MDA(+)/MDA(-)), 2 seeders were placed with 4 piglets in direct contact and 5 in indirect contact (3 replicates per group). Serological kinetics (ELISA) and individual viral shedding (RT-PCR) were monitored for 28 days after infection. MDA waning was estimated using a nonlinear mixed-effects model and survival analysis. Differential transmission rates were estimated depending on the piglets' initial serological status and contact structure (direct contact with pen-mates or indirect airborne contact). The time to MDA waning was 71.3 [52.8-92.1] days on average. The airborne transmission rate was 1.41 [0.64-2.63] per day. The compared shedding pattern between groups showed that MDA(+) piglets had mainly a reduced susceptibility to infection compared to MDA(-) piglets. The resulting reproduction number estimated in MDA(+) piglets (5.8 [1.4-18.9]), although 3 times lower than in MDA(-) piglets (14.8 [6.4-27.1]), was significantly higher than 1. Such an efficient and extended spread of swIAV at the population scale in the presence of MDAs could contribute to swIAV persistence on farms, given the fact that the period when transmission is expected to be impacted by the presence of MDAs can last up to 10 weeks.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27530456 PMCID: PMC4988049 DOI: 10.1186/s13567-016-0365-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Figure 1Description of the experimental design. Representation of the contact structure of the experiment (inoculated and direct-contact piglets in the pen on the left side of each room; indirect-contact piglets on the right side) for both MDA+ group (piglets having maternally-derived antibodies (MDAs); first column, rooms B1, B2 and B3) and MDA− group (piglets without MDAs; second column, rooms F1, F2 and F3). Control piglets (MDA+ and MDA−) are in room C1.
Figure 2Swine influenza A serological profiles observed in the different piglet groups. Serological profiles (ELISA LSI, boxplot) of piglets having high initial antibody levels and showing continuous antibody decay without serological response after infection (MDAH+, dark blue), piglets having low initial antibody levels and showing moderate serological response after infection (MDAL+, light blue) and piglets without maternally-derived antibodies and showing a marked serological response after infection (MDA−, red).
Figure 3Individual virological results. Detection of the influenza A virus genome in nasal secretions of piglets with (first column, rooms B1, B2 and B3) or without passive immunity (second column, rooms F1, F2 and F3), inoculated or in contact (direct or indirect). Grey-tinted squares match positive M gene RT-PCR results (MDAH+ in dark grey, MDAL+ and MDA− in light grey).
Figure 4Shedding profiles of contact piglets and comparison between groups. Average population profiles of viral shedding in MDA+ (A) and MDA− (B) direct- and indirect-contact piglets; distributions of the viral shedding peak (C) and the global amount of viral shedding (AUC, D) in MDAH+, MDAL+ and MDA− direct- and indirect-contact piglets.
Estimation of the transmission parameters [95 % Confidence Interval] for MDA ( = 26), MDA ( = 7) and MDA ( = 33) piglets
| Transmission rates | Susceptibility factors | BIC | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Model 1 | 2.48 | 1.43 | 0.38 | 0.92 | 127.3 |
| Model 2 | 2.43 | 1.41 | 0.39 | – | 116.2 |
| Model 3 | 2.60 | 1.35 | 0.45a
| 119.4 | |
Overall population estimate applying to MDAH+ and MDAL+ piglets; BIC: Bayesian Information Criteria
With β being the direct transmission rate, β the airborne transmission rate, σ the susceptibility factor for MDAH+ piglets and σ the susceptibility factor for MDAL+ piglets.
Model 1: different susceptibility factors for MDAH+, MDAL+ and MDA− piglets (σ ≠ σ and σ < 1).
Model 2: same susceptibility factor for MDAL+ and MDA− piglets (σ = 1 and σ < 1).
Model 3: same susceptibility factor for MDAH+ and MDAL+ piglets (σ = σ et σ < 1).
Estimation of the reproduction numbers R for MDA and MDA piglets using the best model (model 2)
| Shedding period | Direct transmission rate β | Susceptibility | R0 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDA+ piglets | 6.1 [5.9–6.4]a | 2.43 [1.09–4.23]a | 0.39 [0.21–0.70] | 14.8 [6.4–27.1] |
| MDA− piglets |
| 5.8 [1.4–18.9] |
a Overall population estimate applying to both groups.
Figure 5Viral genome loads in aerosols. Deduced from M gene RT-PCR analyses (45—Cq value) performed on air samples taken in each room (rooms B1, B2 and B3 correspond to rooms housing piglets with maternally-derived antibodies (MDAs); rooms F1, F2 and F3 to piglets without MDAs) during the animal experiment.