Investigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacy

Abstract Background Recent studies have hypothesized that circulation of classical swine fever virus (CSFV) variants when the immunity induced by the vaccine is not sterilizing might favour viral persistence. Likewise, in addition to congenital viral persistence, CSFV has also been proven to generat...

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Main Authors: Liani Coronado, Jose Alejandro Bohórquez, Sara Muñoz-González, Lester Josue Perez, Rosa Rosell, Osvaldo Fonseca, Laiyen Delgado, Carmen Laura Perera, Maria Teresa Frías, Llilianne Ganges
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-07-01
Series:BMC Veterinary Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-019-1982-x
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language English
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author Liani Coronado
Jose Alejandro Bohórquez
Sara Muñoz-González
Lester Josue Perez
Rosa Rosell
Osvaldo Fonseca
Laiyen Delgado
Carmen Laura Perera
Maria Teresa Frías
Llilianne Ganges
spellingShingle Liani Coronado
Jose Alejandro Bohórquez
Sara Muñoz-González
Lester Josue Perez
Rosa Rosell
Osvaldo Fonseca
Laiyen Delgado
Carmen Laura Perera
Maria Teresa Frías
Llilianne Ganges
Investigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacy
BMC Veterinary Research
CSFV
Chronic infection
Persistent infection
Vaccination failures
Viral evolution
author_facet Liani Coronado
Jose Alejandro Bohórquez
Sara Muñoz-González
Lester Josue Perez
Rosa Rosell
Osvaldo Fonseca
Laiyen Delgado
Carmen Laura Perera
Maria Teresa Frías
Llilianne Ganges
author_sort Liani Coronado
title Investigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacy
title_short Investigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacy
title_full Investigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacy
title_fullStr Investigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacy
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacy
title_sort investigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacy
publisher BMC
series BMC Veterinary Research
issn 1746-6148
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Background Recent studies have hypothesized that circulation of classical swine fever virus (CSFV) variants when the immunity induced by the vaccine is not sterilizing might favour viral persistence. Likewise, in addition to congenital viral persistence, CSFV has also been proven to generate postnatal viral persistence. Under experimental conditions, postnatal persistently infected pigs were unable to elicit a specific immune response to a CSFV live attenuated vaccine via the mechanism known as superinfection exclusion (SIE). Here, we study whether subclinical forms of classical swine fever (CSF) may be present in a conventional farm in an endemic country and evaluate vaccine efficacy under these types of infections in field conditions. Results Six litters born from CSF-vaccinated gilts were randomly chosen from a commercial Cuban farm at 33 days of age (weaning). At this time, the piglets were vaccinated with a lapinized live attenuated CSFV C-strain vaccine. Virological and immunological analyses were performed before and after vaccination. The piglets were clinically healthy at weaning; however, 82% were viraemic, and the rectal swabs in most of the remaining 18% were positive. Only five piglets from one litter showed a specific antibody response. The tonsils and rectal swabs of five sows were CSFV positive, and only one of the sows showed an antibody response. After vaccination, 98% of the piglets were unable to clear the virus and to seroconvert, and some of the piglets showed polyarthritis and wasting after 36 days post vaccination. The CSFV E2 glycoprotein sequences recovered from one pig per litter were the same. The amino acid positions 72(R), 20(L) and 195(N) of E2 were identified in silico as positions associated with adaptive advantage. Conclusions Circulation of chronic and persistent CSF infections was demonstrated in field conditions under a vaccination programme. Persistent infection was predominant. Here, we provide evidence that, in field conditions, subclinical infections are not detected by clinical diagnosis and, despite being infected with CSFV, the animals are vaccinated, rather than diagnosed and eliminated. These animals are refractory to vaccination, likely due to the SIE phenomenon. Improvement of vaccination strategies and diagnosis of subclinical forms of CSF is imperative for CSF eradication.
topic CSFV
Chronic infection
Persistent infection
Vaccination failures
Viral evolution
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-019-1982-x
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spelling doaj-6d640c17d64640eeb0d8c8b0f09a1b052020-11-25T03:20:52ZengBMCBMC Veterinary Research1746-61482019-07-0115111310.1186/s12917-019-1982-xInvestigation of chronic and persistent classical swine fever infections under field conditions and their impact on vaccine efficacyLiani Coronado0Jose Alejandro Bohórquez1Sara Muñoz-González2Lester Josue Perez3Rosa Rosell4Osvaldo Fonseca5Laiyen Delgado6Carmen Laura Perera7Maria Teresa Frías8Llilianne Ganges9National Centre for Animal and Plant Health (CENSA), OIE Collaborating Centre for Disaster Risk Reduction in Animal HealthOIE Reference Laboratory for Classical Swine Fever, IRTA-CReSA, Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de BarcelonaOIE Reference Laboratory for Classical Swine Fever, IRTA-CReSA, Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de BarcelonaUniversity of Illinois, College of Veterinary Science, Department of Clinical Veterinary MedicineOIE Reference Laboratory for Classical Swine Fever, IRTA-CReSA, Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de BarcelonaNational Centre for Animal and Plant Health (CENSA), OIE Collaborating Centre for Disaster Risk Reduction in Animal HealthNational Centre for Animal and Plant Health (CENSA), OIE Collaborating Centre for Disaster Risk Reduction in Animal HealthNational Centre for Animal and Plant Health (CENSA), OIE Collaborating Centre for Disaster Risk Reduction in Animal HealthNational Centre for Animal and Plant Health (CENSA), OIE Collaborating Centre for Disaster Risk Reduction in Animal HealthOIE Reference Laboratory for Classical Swine Fever, IRTA-CReSA, Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de BarcelonaAbstract Background Recent studies have hypothesized that circulation of classical swine fever virus (CSFV) variants when the immunity induced by the vaccine is not sterilizing might favour viral persistence. Likewise, in addition to congenital viral persistence, CSFV has also been proven to generate postnatal viral persistence. Under experimental conditions, postnatal persistently infected pigs were unable to elicit a specific immune response to a CSFV live attenuated vaccine via the mechanism known as superinfection exclusion (SIE). Here, we study whether subclinical forms of classical swine fever (CSF) may be present in a conventional farm in an endemic country and evaluate vaccine efficacy under these types of infections in field conditions. Results Six litters born from CSF-vaccinated gilts were randomly chosen from a commercial Cuban farm at 33 days of age (weaning). At this time, the piglets were vaccinated with a lapinized live attenuated CSFV C-strain vaccine. Virological and immunological analyses were performed before and after vaccination. The piglets were clinically healthy at weaning; however, 82% were viraemic, and the rectal swabs in most of the remaining 18% were positive. Only five piglets from one litter showed a specific antibody response. The tonsils and rectal swabs of five sows were CSFV positive, and only one of the sows showed an antibody response. After vaccination, 98% of the piglets were unable to clear the virus and to seroconvert, and some of the piglets showed polyarthritis and wasting after 36 days post vaccination. The CSFV E2 glycoprotein sequences recovered from one pig per litter were the same. The amino acid positions 72(R), 20(L) and 195(N) of E2 were identified in silico as positions associated with adaptive advantage. Conclusions Circulation of chronic and persistent CSF infections was demonstrated in field conditions under a vaccination programme. Persistent infection was predominant. Here, we provide evidence that, in field conditions, subclinical infections are not detected by clinical diagnosis and, despite being infected with CSFV, the animals are vaccinated, rather than diagnosed and eliminated. These animals are refractory to vaccination, likely due to the SIE phenomenon. Improvement of vaccination strategies and diagnosis of subclinical forms of CSF is imperative for CSF eradication.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-019-1982-xCSFVChronic infectionPersistent infectionVaccination failuresViral evolution