Literature DB >> 32615031

Latent pseudorabies virus infection in medulla oblongata from quarantined pigs.

Jin-Jin Lu1, Wan-Zhe Yuan2, Yong-Ping Zhu3, Shao-Hua Hou4, Xiao-Jia Wang1.   

Abstract

Pseudorabies virus (PRV) is a major pathogen in pig husbandry and is also a risk to human well-being. Pigs with latent PRV infection carry the virus lifelong, and it can be activated under conducive conditions. This poses a very important challenge to the control of the virus and may even prevent its elimination. To investigate latent infection with wild-type (wt) PRV, and also infection due to the use of live attenuated vaccines on farms, 80 pigs from two large-scale swine operations were traced. At 6 months old, the quarantined pigs were slaughtered and brain samples were collected. A PCR assay targeting the gB and gE genes was developed to detect PRV DNA fragments in medulla oblongata. Five of the samples (6.3%) were gB and gE gene fragment double-positive, 60 of the samples (75%) were gB single-positive, and 15 samples (18.7%) showed double-negative. A portion of latency-associated transcripts (LATs), EP0 mRNA, were found to be present in the gB gene fragment positive samples. Furthermore, the five double-positive samples were transmitted blindly, and apparent cytopathic effects were found in three of the five samples in the fourth generation. By means of Western blotting, PCR and sequencing, two of the isolated viruses were found to be related to vaccine strain Bartha-K61. Another was closely related to domestic epidemic strains HN1201 and LA and relatively unrelated to other Asian isolates. These results suggest that the live vaccines are latently present in brains, in a manner similar to wt PRV, and this poses potential safety issues in the pig husbandry industry. Wt PRV and live vaccine viruses were found to co-exist in pigs, demonstrating that the live vaccines were unable to confer complete sterilizing immunity, which may explain outbreaks of pseudorabies on vaccinated farms.
© 2020 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.

Entities:  

Keywords:  co-exist; latent infection; live attenuated vaccine; medulla oblongata; pseudorabies virus

Year:  2020        PMID: 32615031     DOI: 10.1111/tbed.13712

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transbound Emerg Dis        ISSN: 1865-1674            Impact factor:   5.005


  4 in total

Review 1.  The Epidemiology and Variation in Pseudorabies Virus: A Continuing Challenge to Pigs and Humans.

Authors:  Qingyun Liu; Yan Kuang; Yafei Li; Huihui Guo; Chuyue Zhou; Shibang Guo; Chen Tan; Bin Wu; Huanchun Chen; Xiangru Wang
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 5.818

2.  The Inactivated gE/TK Gene-Deleted Vaccine Against Pseudorabies Virus Type II Confers Effective Protection in Mice and Pigs.

Authors:  Yu-Lan Jin; Di Yin; Gang Xing; Yan-Ming Huang; Chun-Mei Fan; Cheng-Fei Fan; Xiao-Huo Qiu; Wei-Ren Dong; Yan Yan; Jin-Yan Gu; Ji-Yong Zhou
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-08-04       Impact factor: 6.064

Review 3.  The Role of Latency-Associated Transcripts in the Latent Infection of Pseudorabies Virus.

Authors:  Jiahuan Deng; Zhuoyun Wu; Jiaqi Liu; Qiuyun Ji; Chunmei Ju
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2022-06-24       Impact factor: 5.818

4.  Mutation and Interaction Analysis of the Glycoprotein D and L and Thymidine Kinase of Pseudorabies Virus.

Authors:  Xue Li; Si Chen; Liying Zhang; Jiawei Zheng; Guyu Niu; Lin Yang; Xinwei Zhang; Linzhu Ren
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2022-09-30       Impact factor: 6.208

  4 in total

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