| Literature DB >> 32168820 |
Rémi Pereira De Oliveira1,2,3, Evelyne Hutet3, Maxime Duhayon1, Jean-Marie Guionnet3, Frédéric Paboeuf3, Laurence Vial1, Marie-Frédérique Le Potier3.
Abstract
African swine fever is a highly lethal hemorrhagic fever of Suidae, threatening pig production globally. Suidae can be infected by different ways like ingestion of contaminated feed, direct contact with infected animals or fomites, and biting by infected soft tick bites. As already described, European soft ticks (Ornithodoros erraticus and Ornithodoros verrucosus) were not able to transmit African swine fever virus by biting pigs although these ticks maintained the infectious virus during several months; therefore, the possibility for pigs to become infected through the ingestion of infected ticks was questioned but not already explored. To determine if such oral ingestion is an alternative pathway of transmission, O. erraticus ticks were infected by blood-feeding on a viremic pig infected with the European African swine fever virus strain Georgia2007/1, then frozen at zero and two months post-engorgement, then after, were embedded in the food to pigs. Pig infection was successful, with superior efficiency with ticks frozen just after the infectious blood meal. These results confirmed the potential role of O. erraticus ticks as an ASFV reservoir and demonstrated the efficiency of non-conventional pathways of transmission.Entities:
Keywords: African swine fever; Ornithodoros erraticuss; domestic pig; ingestion; soft tick; transmission
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32168820 PMCID: PMC7150827 DOI: 10.3390/v12030300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1African swine fever viral titer of the soft ticks frozen at 0 and 2 months post infectious blood meal (10 ticks/group).
Pig infection by ingestion of infected ticks at zero and two months post-infection or “virus spiked brioche”.
| Pig | Pig Group | Initial Day of Hyperthermia | Day of Euthanasia | ASFV Diagnosis (PCR) | ASF Diagnosis (ELISA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | 1 | 3 | 4 | + | NT |
| #2 | 4 | 5 | + | NT | |
| #3 (contact pig) | No hyperthermia | 5 | − | NT | |
| #4 | 2 | 6 | 7 | + | NT |
| #5 | No hyperthermia | 10 | − | − | |
| #6 | No hyperthermia | 10 | − | − | |
| #7 | 3 | No hyperthermia | 10 | − | − |
| #8 | No hyperthermia | 10 | − | − | |
| #9 | No hyperthermia | 10 | − | − | |
| #10 | 4 | No hyperthermia | 10 | − | − |
| #11 | No hyperthermia | 10 | − | − |
+: positive ASFV diagnosis; −: negative ASFV diagnosis. NT: not tested.