| Literature DB >> 35642044 |
Dongliang Wang1, Jinhui Mai1, Yi Yang1, Chao-Ting Xiao2, Naidong Wang3.
Abstract
Porcine circovirus type 4 (PCV4) is a newly emerging virus, with both PCV4 genomic DNA and specific antibodies detected in swine herds in several provinces in China and South Korea. Although the virus was first identified in 2019 in Hunan, China, retrospective research suggests that serum samples collected as early as 2008 were positive for PCV4 antibody. Infections with only PCV4 or co-infections with other pathogens have been associated with several clinical manifestations, but its pathogenesis remains to be determined. The purpose of this review was the following: (1) to characterize PCV4 epidemiology by assessing evolutionary dynamics and genetic diversity of PCV4 strains circulating in swine herds; (2) to reconstruct a computerized 3D model to analyze PCV4 Cap properties; (3) and to summarize the current evidence of PCV4-associated clinical-pathological manifestations. The origin of PCV4 is apparently distinct from other PCV, based on analysis of phylogenetic trees. Of note, PCV4 shares an ancient common ancestor with mink circoviruses. Furthermore, the amino acid residue at position 27 of the PCV4 Cap is a key benchmark to distinguish PCV4a (27S) from PCV4b (27 N), based on PCV4 strains currently available, and variation of this residue may alter Cap antigenicity. In addition, the capsid surface of PCV4 has characteristics of increased polar residues, compared to PCV2, which raises the possibility that PCV4 may target negatively charged host receptors to promote virus infection. Further studies are required, including virus isolation and culture, and more detailed characterization of molecular epidemiology and genetic diversity of PCV4 in swine herds.Entities:
Keywords: Cap; PCV4; epidemiology; genetic diversity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35642044 PMCID: PMC9158299 DOI: 10.1186/s13567-022-01053-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.829
Figure 1Genomic characterization of PCV4. The PCV4 genome, a single-stranded circular DNA genome with 1770 nt, contains two major ORF that differ from those in PCV1, PCV2 and PCV3. However, the stem-loop of PCV4 has a conserved 9-nt nonanucleotide sequence (CAGTATTAC) located within the intergenic region between ORF1 and ORF2.
Figure 2Phylogenetic trees of circoviruses, using conserved Rep amino acid sequences. The analysis contained 93 amino acid sequences. Neighbor joining (A) and maximum likelihood (B) trees were reconstructed using the p-distance and Jones-Taylor-Thornton (JTT) model, respectively, with 1000 bootstrap replicates and bootstrap >50%.
Figure 3Phylogenetic trees of PCV4, based on the complete genome. A neighbor joining tree was reconstructed using p-distance model with 1000 bootstrap replicates and bootstrap >50%. Amino acid sequences of putative ORF1 and ORF2 were aligned with the ESPript 3.0 online tool, and the hot-spots of mutations are represented by the columns with their corresponding positions.
Figure 43D structures of PCV2 and PCV4 Cap and capsid. The 3D structure of PCV4 Cap was generated via homology modeling, using the PCV2 Cap as a template (PDB ID: 3R0R). 3D structures of Cap and capsid were displayed with Pymol version 1.8.0.3. Electrostatic surface analysis of Cap monomer (far left) was computed in Chimera. The positively charged and polar amino acid residues of the Cap monomer (center) and capsid (far right) were indicated by light blue and red, respectively.
Detection of PCV4 in clinical samples.
| Region | Host | Sample | Year | Clinal signs | Positive rate | Co-infections | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hunan | Pigs | Serum, lung, spleen and kidney | 2019 | Respiratory disease, diarrhea, PDNS | 12.8% (24/187) | / | [ |
| Henan | Sow, sucking, weaning, grower, aborted fetuses | Heart, liver, spleen, lung, kidney, brain, intestine, lymph node, serum | 2012–2020 | Neurological symptom, PDNS, diarrhea, enteritis, PMWS, respiratory symptom, abortion, encephalitis | 45.39% (69/152) | Both PCV2, 3, PRV, PEDV, and PRRSV | [ |
| Inner Mongolia | Healthy sows, nursery and fattening pigs | Serum | 2016–2018 | / | 1.6% (27/1683) | PCV2 or PCV3 | [ |
| Henan and Shanxi | Suckling, weanling pigs, fetuses | Brain, heart, liver, spleen, kidney, lung, lymph nodes, small intestines | 2018–2019 | Respiratory symptom, diarrhea, neurological symptom, PMWS | 25.4% (16/63) | Both PCV2, 3 and PRV; Both PCV2 and PRV | [ |
| Guangxi | Pigs | Serum | 2015–2019 | Respiratory disease, PDNS | 5.1% (13/257) | PCV2 or PCV3; Both PCV2 and PCV3 | [ |
| Anhui | Pig | Lung, spleen, kidney, duodenum | 2019 | Skin diseases | 10.71% (18/168) | PCV2 or PCV3; Both PCV2 and PCV3 | [ |
| Jiangsu | Pig | Lymph node, tonsil, lung, kidney and liver | 2018–2019 | Dead pigs | 3.33% (4/120) | Both PCV1, 2, 3 | [ |
| South Korea | Sow, aborted fetuses, suckling, weaned, growers | Lung, spleen, heart, kidneys | 2019–2020 | Healthy suckling pigs, dead pigs, aborted fetuses | 3.28% (11/335) | / | [ |
| Korea | Pigs | Tissues, serum, oral fluids | 2020–2021 | Diseases pigs | 39.3% (57/145) | / | [ |
| Henan | Pigs | Liver, spleen, kidney, lung, lymph nodes, intestine, serum | 2020–2021 | / | 33.33% (45/133) | PCV2 | [ |
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