Genealogy of an in-vivo passaged isolate of western Canadian bovine respiratory syncytial virus.

IF 1.1 4区 农林科学 Q2 Veterinary
John Ellis, Jacqueline Marx, Sudeep Perumbakkam, Keith West, Sheryl Gow, Stacey Lacoste, Avinash Gururaja, Aleksandar Masic, Britany Nehring Lappin, Chadwick Brice, Suman M Mahan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV) is a primary respiratory pathogen in calves. Clinical infection with this pathogen has been experimentally modelled to assess vaccine efficacy using a field isolate (Asquith) of BRSV that has been sequentially passaged in vivo in neonatal calves to maintain virulence. The objective of this retrospective cumulative analysis of passages over approximately 20 years was to determine if there have been any changes in the viral genome of this isolate because of this process. Sequence analyses indicated that the Asquith isolate placed genetically in a clade comprising US and some European isolates and a recently described Chinese BRSV isolate (DQ). Furthermore, there were rare changes in bases over time in the N, G, and F gene segments examined when comparing among different passages ranging from 1996 to 2019. These results indicated the absence of significant mutations in the absence of significant adaptive immunological pressure.

加拿大西部牛呼吸道合胞病毒体内传代分离物的系谱分析。
牛呼吸道合胞病毒(BRSV)是犊牛的主要呼吸道病原体。该病原体的临床感染已通过实验建模来评估疫苗效力,使用BRSV的野外分离物(Asquith),该分离物已在新生儿小牛体内依次传代以保持毒力。这项回顾性累积分析的目的是确定该分离株的病毒基因组是否因这一过程而发生任何变化。序列分析表明,Asquith分离株在遗传上属于由美国和一些欧洲分离株以及最近发现的中国BRSV分离株(DQ)组成的进化支。此外,在比较1996年至2019年的不同传代时,所检测的N、G和F基因片段的碱基随时间的变化很少。这些结果表明,在没有显著的适应性免疫压力的情况下,没有显著的突变。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
58
审稿时长
>24 weeks
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research, published by the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association, is Canada''s only veterinary research publication. This quarterly peer-reviewed online-only journal has earned a wide international readership through the publishing of high quality scientific papers in the field of veterinary medicine. The Journal publishes the results of original research in veterinary and comparative medicine.
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