Emergence and Characterization of Three Pseudorabies Variants with Moderate Pathogenicity in Growing Pigs
Zhendong Zhang, Cong Wang, Chengyue Wu, Qingteng Wei, Zhengqin Ye, Wenqiang Wang, Zhe Sun, Kegong Tian, Xiangdong Li

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes three new pseudorabies virus strains with moderate pathogenicity in growing pigs, contributing to understanding the virus's evolution in China.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the genetic and pathogenic characteristics of recent pseudorabies virus variants in growing pigs.
Findings
Three PRV strains (SD1501, SD1701, SD1801) clustered with genotype II variant strains prevalent in China.
The isolates showed moderate pathogenicity, causing transient fever and neurological symptoms in pigs.
Findings enhance understanding of PRV evolution and provide evidence for phenotypic variations in PRV infection.
Abstract
Pseudorabies virus (PRV) remains a critical threat for the global swine industry, with heightened attention due to the emergence of variant strains since late 2011 in China. Emergent viral variants generally undergo three to four years of adaptation to present new phenotypes. However, limited investigations have been performed on the evolution and pathogenicity of variant PRV strains in growing pigs after 2015. In this study, three PRV field strains, named SD1501, SD1701, and SD1801, were isolated and their genetic characteristics and pathogenicity on 9-week-old pigs were analyzed. Nucleotide identity and phylogenetic analyses based on the complete genome sequence, as well as major immunogenic and virulence-related genes revealed that all three isolates clustered closely with genotype II variant strains prevalent in China. The pathogenicity analysis demonstrated that the three isolates…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHerpesvirus Infections and Treatments · Animal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases
