| Literature DB >> 30661301 |
John Flannery1, Beatriz Sanz-Bernardo1, Martin Ashby1, Hannah Brown1, Simon Carpenter1, Lyndsay Cooke1, Amanda Corla1, Lorraine Frost1, Simon Gubbins1, Hayley Hicks1, Mehnaz Qureshi1, Paulina Rajko-Nenow1, Christopher Sanders1, Matthew Tully1, Emmanuel Bréard2, Corinne Sailleau2, Stephan Zientara2, Karin Darpel1, Carrie Batten1.
Abstract
The outbreak of bluetongue virus (BTV) serotype 8 (BTV-8) during 2006-2009 in Europe was the most costly epidemic of the virus in recorded history. In 2015, a BTV-8 strain re-emerged in France which has continued to circulate since then. To examine anecdotal reports of reduced pathogenicity and transmission efficiency, we investigated the infection kinetics of a 2007 UK BTV-8 strain alongside the re-emerging BTV-8 strain isolated from France in 2017. Two groups of eight BTV-naïve British mule sheep were inoculated with 5.75 log10 TCID50 /ml of either BTV-8 strain. BTV RNA was detected by 2 dpi in both groups with peak viraemia occurring between 5-9 dpi. A significantly greater amount of BTV RNA was detected in sheep infected with the 2007 strain (6.0-8.8 log10 genome copies/ml) than the re-emerging BTV-8 strain (2.9-7.9 log10 genome copies/ml). All infected sheep developed BTV-specific antibodies by 9 dpi. BTV was isolated from 2 dpi to 12 dpi for 2007 BTV-8-inoculated sheep and from 5 to 10 dpi for sheep inoculated with the remerging BTV-8. In Culicoides sonorensis feeding on the sheep over the period 7-12 dpi, vector competence was significantly higher for the 2007 strain than the re-emerging strain. Both the proportion of animals showing moderate (as opposed to mild or no) clinical disease (6/8 vs. 1/8) and the overall clinical scores (median 5.25 vs. 3) were significantly higher in sheep infected with the 2007 strain, compared to those infected with the re-emerging strain. However, one sheep infected with the re-emerging strain was euthanized at 16 dpi having developed severe lameness. This highlights the potential of the re-emerging BTV-8 to still cause illness in naïve ruminants with concurrent costs to the livestock industry.Entities:
Keywords: European serotypes; arboviruses; bluetongue virus; infection kinetics; virus isolation RT-qPCR
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30661301 PMCID: PMC6563110 DOI: 10.1111/tbed.13131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transbound Emerg Dis ISSN: 1865-1674 Impact factor: 5.005
Figure 1Daily temperatures of sheep inoculated with UKG2007 (a) and FRA2017 (c) and combined clinical scores of sheep inoculated with UKG2007 (b) and FRA2017 (d) [Colour figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Figure 2Bluetongue virus genome concentrations in sheep inoculated with UKG2007 (a) and FRA2017 (b) and mean genome concentrations for both groups (c). Sheep 2 and Sheep 18 are the control animals [Colour figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Figure 3Antibody response of sheep inoculated with UKG2007 (a) and FRA2017 (b) as determined by C‐ELISA. The dashed line represents the positive/negative cut off of the ELISA whereby values <40% inhibition are considered positive. Sheep 2 and Sheep 18 are the control animals [Colour figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]