| Literature DB >> 31160748 |
Johanna Kennedy1,2, Vanessa Maria Pfankuche3, Doris Hoeltig4, Alexander Postel1, Oliver Keuling5, Malgorzata Ciurkiewicz3, Wolfgang Baumgärtner3, Paul Becher6,7, Christine Baechlein8,9.
Abstract
Pegiviruses belong to the family Flaviviridae and have been found in humans and other mammalian species. To date eleven different pegivirus species (Pegivirus A-K) have been described. However, little is known about the tissue tropism and replication of pegiviruses. In 2016, a so far unknown porcine pegivirus (PPgV, Pegivirus K) was described and persistent infection in the host, similar to human pegivirus, was reported. In this study, qRT-PCR, phylogenetic analyses and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) were implemented to detect and quantify PPgV genome content in serum samples from domestic pigs from Europe and Asia, in tissue and peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) samples and wild boar serum samples from Germany. PPgV was detectable in 2.7% of investigated domestic pigs from Europe and China (viral genome load 2.4 × 102 to 2.0 × 106 PPgV copies/ml), while all wild boar samples were tested negative. Phylogenetic analyses revealed pairwise nucleotide identities >90% among PPgVs. Finally, PPgV was detected in liver, thymus and PBMCs by qRT-PCR and FISH, suggesting liver- and lymphotropism. Taken together, this study provides first insights into the tissue tropism of PPgV and shows its distribution and genetic variability in Europe and China.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31160748 PMCID: PMC6547670 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-44642-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Porcine pegivirus genome detection rates and viral genome load in serum samples from individual animals and herds from different countries in Europe and Asia1.
| Country of origin | No. animals | No. herds | No. PPgV pos. animals (%) | No. PPgV pos. herds (%) | Genome load range (copies/ml) | Genome load average (copies/ml) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | 652 | 39 | 12 (1.8) | 8 (20.5) | 2.0 × 103–2.0 × 106 | 3.8 × 105 |
| Poland | 186 | 12 | 4 (2.2) | 3 (25.0) | 7.1 × 103–3.3 × 104 | 1.9 × 104 |
| Italy | 200 | 20 | 5 (2.5) | 2 (10.0) | 3.6 × 102–1.6 × 106 | 5.7 × 105 |
| Serbia | 73 | 7 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | — | — |
| Switzerland | 120 | 20 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | — | — |
| Great Britain | 87 | unknown | 9 (10.3) | unknown | 1.7 × 103–1.2 × 106 | 5.5 × 105 |
| China | 218 | 12 | 17 (7.8) | 7 (58.3) | 2.4 × 102–1.2 × 106 | 2.9 × 105 |
| Taiwan | 200 | 22 | 0 (0) | 0(0) | — | — |
| Total | 1,736 | 132 | 47 (2.7) | 20 (15.2) | 2.4 × 102–2.0 × 106 | 3.8 × 105 |
1PPgV, porcine pegivirus; pos., positive.
Number of pegivirus positive pigs of different age groups from Europe and China.
| Country of origin | Sampling year(s) | Piglets <4 weeks old (%) | Fattening pigs >4 weeks old (%) | Sows & boar (%) | Unknown age (%) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | 2015–2018 | — | 6/458 (1.3) | 6/166 (3.6) | 0/28 (0) | 12/652 (1.8) |
| Poland | 2017 | 1/12 (8.3) | 1/82 (1.2) | 2/78 (2.6) | 0/14 (0) | 4/186 (2.2) |
| Italy | 2015 | — | 4/100 (4.0) | 1/100 (1.0) | — | 5/200 (2.5) |
| Serbia | 2015 | — | 0/63 (0) | 0/10 (0) | — | 0/73 (0) |
| Switzerland | 2015 | — | 0/120 (0) | — | — | 0/120 (0) |
| Great Britain | 2016 | — | — | — | 9/87 (10.3) | 9/87 (10.3) |
| China | 2014 | 1/96 (1.0) | — | 10/103 (9.7) | 6/19 (31.6) | 17/218 (7.8) |
| Taiwan | 2015 | — | 0/100 (0) | 0/100 (0) | — | 0/200 (0) |
| Total | 2014–2018 | 2/108 (1.9) | 11/923 (1.2) | 19/557 (3.4) | 15/148 (10.1) | 47/1,736 (2.7) |
Figure 1Phylogenetic analysis of porcine pegiviruses from different countries and other mammalian pegiviruses. Numbers along branches represent percentage bootstrap values (bootstrap values < 80% are not given). GenBank accession numbers are in parentheses. Scale bar indicates nucleotide substitutions per site. PPgV sequences are marked with a circle and the circle color indicates the country of origin. Pegivirus species A-K are indicated on the right.
Porcine pegivirus RNA quantities and fluorescence in situ hybridization results in blood and different tissues from two domestic pigs from Germany1.
| Blood component/tissue | Animal A | Animal B | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PPgV RNA copies | FISH | PPgV RNA copies | FISH | |
| Serum | 2,051.1 /µl | n.d. | 388.6 /µl | n.d. |
| PBMCs | 46 /µl whole blood |
| n.d.* | n.d. |
| Liver | 343.9 /mg |
| 142.5 /mg |
|
| Thymus | 30.5 /mg |
| 28.9 /mg |
|
| Spleen | 25.5 /mg | negative | 23.8 /mg | n.d. |
| Bone marrow | 17.0 /mg | negative | 2.9 /mg | n.d. |
| Tonsils | 10.2 /mg | negative | 0 /mg | n.d. |
| Pancreas | 2.8 /mg | negative | 7.7 /mg | n.d. |
| Mandibular lymph nodes | 15.8 /mg | negative | 0 /mg | n.d. |
| Pancreatic lymph nodes | n.d. | negative | n.d. | n.d. |
1PPgV, porcine pegivirus; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; n.d., not determined; boldface indicates positive FISH results; *fresh blood was not available.
Figure 2Fluorescence in situ hybridization of porcine pegivirus (PPgV) positive and negative pigs using a PPgV specific probe; overlay phase contrast and immunofluorescence; bar = 100 µm. (A) Single hepatocytes of the liver of a PPgV positive pig showed an intracytoplasmic positive signal for PPgV using a PPgV specific probe, also shown at higher magnification in the insert; arrows: nuclei of hepatocytes surrounded by intracytoplasmic, red, positive signals. (B) The liver of a PPgV negative pig lacked a PPgV specific signal. (C) Within the thymus of a PPgV positive pig, scattered cells showed an intracytoplasmic red positive signal for PPgV, also shown at higher magnification in the insert. (D) Within the thymus of a PPgV negative pig, all cells were negative for PPgV using a PPgV specific probe. (E) Several PBMCs from a PPgV positive pig showed a red positive signal using a PPgV specific probe, also shown at higher magnification in the insert. (F) PBMCs from a PPgV negative pig were negative for PPgV.