Yong Li, Cheng Yang, Xin-Lei Li, Jiu-Ying Sun, Ning Cheng, Kai-Yue Wang, Ying-Feng Sun
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Recent outbreaks of PRRSV in live attenuated vaccine-immunized pig farms in Tianjin, China have raised questions about the etiological characteristics and pathogenicity of the PRRSV variant, which remains unknown. In this study, a multiple lineages recombinant PRRSV strain named TJ-C6, was isolated and identified. Phylogenetic trees and genome homology analyses revealed that TJ-C6 belonged to lineage 1.8 (NADC30-like) and with similar 131 discontinuous amino acid deletion pattern (111-aa + 1-a + 19-aa) in Nsp2-coding region, but it was classified in lineage 1.5 (NADC34-like) cluster based on ORF5 sequence. Furthermore, the recombination analyses revealed that TJ-C6 was a multiple recombinant virus among lineage 1.5(NADC34- like), lineage 1.8(NADC30- like), and lineage 3(GM2-Like) strains with four recombination breakpoints in Nsp9 (nt 7298/8111), ORF2 (nt 12213) and ORF6 (nt 14628), which was different from the previously prevalent PRRSV strain. Challenge experiments with 3-week-old piglets showed that TJ-C6 could cause piglets high fever, loss of appetite and severely histopathological lung lesions. Taken altogether, multiple co-circulating lineages of PRRSV strains in the swine population are accelerating the emergence of natural recombinant strains with variations in pathogenicity and highlight the importance of surveillance of newly emerging PRRSV strains in China.
期刊介绍:
Veterinary Research Communications publishes fully refereed research articles and topical reviews on all aspects of the veterinary sciences. Interdisciplinary articles are particularly encouraged, as are well argued reviews, even if they are somewhat controversial.
The journal is an appropriate medium in which to publish new methods, newly described diseases and new pathological findings, as these are applied to animals. The material should be of international rather than local interest. As it deliberately seeks a wide coverage, Veterinary Research Communications provides its readers with a means of keeping abreast of current developments in the entire field of veterinary science.