| Literature DB >> 33816588 |
Taehwan Oh1, Duy Tien Do2, Hung Van Vo3, Hyeok-Il Kwon4, Seung-Chul Lee4, Min Ho Kim4, Dung Thi Thu Nguyen2, Quang Tin Vinh Le3, Tan Minh Tran3, Toan Tat Nguyen2, Joo Young Lee4, Chanhee Chae1.
Abstract
African swine fever virus (ASFV) causes hemorrhagic disease in domestic pigs by replicating mainly in monocyte/macrophage lineages. Various primary cells including pulmonary alveolar macrophages have been used for the propagation of ASFV on this account. However, ethical constraints and consistency problems exist as it is necessary to harvest same phenotype of primary cells in order to continue a study. We suggested renal-derived swine macrophages as a novel primary cell candidate to address these issues. These primary cells proved to be permissive to both cell adapted ASFV and a wild-type ASFV. Compared to the commercial cell line MA-104, the renal-derived macrophages were more suitable to isolate the field virus. The consistent molecular characteristics of the renal-derived macrophages were demonstrated by immunocytochemistry with antibodies against macrophage cell surface markers including CD163, CD172a, and Iba-1. Viral protein p30 and p72 expression in ASFV infected macrophages was confirmed by immunocytochemistry by use of specific monoclonal antibodies. We observed increase of cell-free viral DNA and infectious virus titer in infected cell supernatant in successive days-post-infection. These results demonstrated that primary renal-derived swine macrophages are useful for ASFV isolation and propagation in terms of cell phenotypes, susceptibility to the virus, and virus production.Entities:
Keywords: African swine fever; molecular chacterization; renal-derived macrophages; virus isolation; virus replication
Year: 2021 PMID: 33816588 PMCID: PMC8017199 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2021.645456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Immunocytochemical characterization of renal-derived swine macrophages using monoclonal antibodies against macrophage markers CD163 (A), 172a (B), and Iba1 (C), epithelial cell markers CK18 (D) and CK19 (E), and mesenchymal cell marker SMA (F) ×400.
Figure 2Immunocytochemistry on renal-derived macrophages infected with viral isolate strain (A,D), infectious tissue homogenates (B,E), and mock infected (C,F) using p72 and p30 antibodies, respectively, in 7 dpi. Positive signals are seen as red grains ×200.
Figure 3Titers of Viral DNA (bar) and infectious virus (line) of (A) ASFV isolate (MW287337) and (B) infectious wild-type virus homogenate (MW039157) were compared for renal macrophage (orange) and MA-104 (blue) cell culture supernatant at 1, 3, 5, and 7 dpi (Results were shown as Log10 Genomic copies/mL and log10 TCID50/mL, respectively, and each time point represents the mean of three independent experiment with different batches of macrophages and MA-104 cells).