病毒性出血性疾病:十年后的RHDV 2型

IF 0.8 4区 农林科学 Q3 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE
L. Capucci, P. Cavadini, A. Lavazza
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RHD has had a devastating effect on rabbit farms, causing great economic damage, especially in China, where RHD was first noticed around 1982, and in Europe. RHD has also severely affected wild rabbit populations, whose drastic decline has caused serious ecological imbalances in territories such as Spain, where rabbits are a central link in the wildlife food chain. Since the early 1990s, with the increased availability on the market of RHDV vaccines effective in protecting rabbits from RHD, the impact of the disease on rabbit farms has been significantly reduced. In the following years, also considering that RHDV is an endemic virus that cannot be eradicated, farmers learned how to manage the continuous use of RHDV vaccine in relation to the epidemiological situation, the type of breeding farm and the costs of vaccination prophylaxis. Although precarious, management of the RHD risk for rabbit farmers reached an acceptable equilibrium, which was, however, completely upset starting from 2010 by the emergence of another lagovirus also causing RHD. The genome of the newly emerged virus shows limited differences from that of RHDV, but the phenotypic traits of the two viruses are distinctive in at least three main respects: 1) The antigenic profile of the virus (the “face” of the virus recognised by the antibodies) is largely different from that of RHDV. 2) Newborn rabbits only a couple of weeks old die of RHD when infected with the new virus, while RHDV infections run asymptomatic until 7-8 wk of age. 3) The new virus, which started in Europe, has spread over the years to several continents, affecting wild and/or domestic rabbit populations. During this worldwide distribution, the new virus infected several lagomorph species and was shown to cause RHD in most of them. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

直到20世纪80年代初,人们还完全不知道lagomorphs是几种杯状病毒的宿主,这些病毒于2000年被国际病毒分类委员会(ICTV)纳入了Lagovirus属。在那些年里,出现了两种新的疾病,它们具有非常相似的临床和病理特征以及相关的高死亡率:家兔出血性疾病(RHD)和欧洲褐兔综合征(EBHS)。花了几年时间才确定这两种疾病,实际上是急性和致命形式的肝炎,是由两种遗传相关的冠状病毒引起的,但ICTV最终根据它们的分子特征和流行病学数据将它们分为两种不同的病毒:兔中的RHDV和褐兔中的EBHSV。RHD对养兔场造成了毁灭性的影响,造成了巨大的经济损失,特别是在1982年左右首次发现RHD的中国和欧洲。RHD还严重影响了野兔的数量,野兔数量的急剧下降已经在西班牙等地区造成了严重的生态失衡,在西班牙,兔子是野生动物食物链的中心环节。自20世纪90年代初以来,随着市场上可有效保护家兔免受狂犬病感染的狂犬病疫苗的增加,这种疾病对养兔场的影响已大大减少。在随后的几年中,也考虑到猪流行性疱疹病毒是一种无法根除的地方性病毒,农民学会了如何根据流行病学情况、养殖场类型和预防接种费用管理持续使用猪流行性疱疹病毒疫苗。尽管不稳定,但养兔农户对RHD风险的管理达到了可接受的平衡,然而,从2010年开始,另一种引起RHD的lagovirus的出现完全打破了这一平衡。新出现的病毒的基因组显示出与RHDV的有限差异,但两种病毒的表型特征至少在三个主要方面是不同的:1)病毒的抗原谱(抗体识别的病毒的“面孔”)与RHDV有很大不同。2)几周大的新生兔子感染新病毒后会死于RHD,而RHDV感染直到7-8周龄才会出现无症状。3)这种新病毒起源于欧洲,多年来已传播到几大洲,影响了野生和(或)家兔种群。在这种全球分布中,新病毒感染了几种lagomorph物种,并在其中大多数物种中引起RHD。考虑到这些显著的差异,以及新病毒不是RHDV的变种,我们建议将其命名为RHDV2型(RHDV2)。所有这些区分rhdvv和RHDV2的主要特征在实践中有以下后果:1)rhdvv和RHDV2之间的抗原差异(它们的“面孔”)是如此之大,以至于我们需要“新的”特异性疫苗来控制RHDV2(即RHDV2是一种新的血清型)。2)乳兔发生RHDV2感染时,母体血液中存在RHDV2抗体是预防RHD的唯一途径。相反,如果新生儿感染了RHDV,就会对RHD产生天然抗性,因此,就保护而言,母体抗体的存在是无用的。3)当RHD暴发发生在兔与其他lagomorphi种群共生的地区时,环境中的病毒污染达到足够高的水平,从而促进RHDV2向其他lagomorphi传播,包括对感染易感性低于兔的lagomorphi。综上所述,RHDV2的这些表型特征是其迅速传播并随之消失的原因。与RHDV2的特殊特征有关的流行病学后果的最显著的例子可能是它在美国和墨西哥的迅速传播,在那里它现在实际上是地方性的。在那里,尽管从2000年起在小的养兔场中多次发生由RHDV引起的RHD孤立暴发,但RHDV从未成为地方病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Viral haemorrhagic disease: RHDV type 2 ten years later
Until the early 1980s, it was totally unknown that lagomorphs were the hosts of several caliciviruses, which were included in the genus Lagovirus by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) in 2000. In those years, two new diseases appeared, with very similar clinical and pathological profiles and associated high mortality rates: rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD) in rabbits and European Brown Hare Syndrome (EBHS) in European brown hares. It took a few years to ascertain that both diseases, actually acute and fatal forms of hepatitis, were caused by two genetically related caliciviruses, but they were finally classified by ICTV into two distinct viral species on the basis of their molecular characterisation and epidemiological data: RHDV in rabbit and EBHSV in brown hare. RHD has had a devastating effect on rabbit farms, causing great economic damage, especially in China, where RHD was first noticed around 1982, and in Europe. RHD has also severely affected wild rabbit populations, whose drastic decline has caused serious ecological imbalances in territories such as Spain, where rabbits are a central link in the wildlife food chain. Since the early 1990s, with the increased availability on the market of RHDV vaccines effective in protecting rabbits from RHD, the impact of the disease on rabbit farms has been significantly reduced. In the following years, also considering that RHDV is an endemic virus that cannot be eradicated, farmers learned how to manage the continuous use of RHDV vaccine in relation to the epidemiological situation, the type of breeding farm and the costs of vaccination prophylaxis. Although precarious, management of the RHD risk for rabbit farmers reached an acceptable equilibrium, which was, however, completely upset starting from 2010 by the emergence of another lagovirus also causing RHD. The genome of the newly emerged virus shows limited differences from that of RHDV, but the phenotypic traits of the two viruses are distinctive in at least three main respects: 1) The antigenic profile of the virus (the “face” of the virus recognised by the antibodies) is largely different from that of RHDV. 2) Newborn rabbits only a couple of weeks old die of RHD when infected with the new virus, while RHDV infections run asymptomatic until 7-8 wk of age. 3) The new virus, which started in Europe, has spread over the years to several continents, affecting wild and/or domestic rabbit populations. During this worldwide distribution, the new virus infected several lagomorph species and was shown to cause RHD in most of them. Considering these marked differences and the fact that the new virus is not a variant of RHDV, we proposed the name RHDV type 2 (RHDV2). All these main distinctive traits that differentiate RHDV from RHDV2 have the following consequences in practice: 1) The antigenic difference between RHDV and RHDV2 (their ‘faces’) is so great that we need “new” specific vaccines to control RHDV2 (i.e. RHDV2 is a new serotype). 2) In the event of an RHDV2 infection in suckling rabbits, the presence of maternal antibodies to RHDV2 in the blood is the only way to prevent RHD. In contrast, newborns are naturally resistant to RHD if infected with RHDV and therefore, in terms of protection, the presence of maternal antibodies is useless. 3) When RHD outbreaks occur in territories where rabbits live in sympatry with populations of other lagomorphs, viral contamination in the environment reaches sufficiently high levels to facilitate the transmission of RHDV2 to other lagomorphs, including those with a lower susceptibility to infection than the rabbit. Taken together, these phenotypic traits characteristic of RHDV2 are the reason for its rapid spread across the territory and the concomitant disappearance of RHDV. Probably the most striking example of the epidemiological consequences related to the peculiar features of RHDV2 is its rapid spread in the USA and Mexico, where it is now practically endemic. There, despite repeated isolated outbreaks of RHD caused by RHDV from 2000 onwards in small rabbit farms, RHDV has never been able to become endemic.
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来源期刊
World Rabbit Science
World Rabbit Science 农林科学-奶制品与动物科学
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
25.00%
发文量
22
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: World Rabbit Science is the official journal of the World Rabbit Science Association (WRSA). One of the main objectives of the WRSA is to encourage communication and collaboration among individuals and organisations associated with rabbit production and rabbit science in general. Subject areas include breeding, genetics, production, management, environment, health, nutrition, physiology, reproduction, behaviour, welfare, immunology, molecular biology, metabolism, processing and products. World Rabbit Science is the only international peer-reviewed journal included in the ISI Thomson list dedicated to publish original research in the field of rabbit science. Papers or reviews of the literature submitted to World Rabbit Science must not have been published previously in an international refereed scientific journal. Previous presentations at a scientific meeting, field day reports or similar documents can be published in World Rabbit Science, but they will be also subjected to the peer-review process. World Rabbit Science will publish papers of international relevance including original research articles, descriptions of novel techniques, contemporaryreviews and meta-analyses. Short communications will only accepted in special cases where, in the Editor''s judgement, the contents are exceptionally exciting, novel or timely. Proceedings of rabbit scientific meetings and conference reports will be considered for special issues. World Rabbit Science is published in English four times a year in a single volume. Authors may publish in World Rabbit Science regardless of the membership in the World Rabbit Science Association, even if joining the WRSA is encouraged. Views expressed in papers published in World Rabbit Science represent the opinion of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of the WRSA or the Editor-in-Chief.
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