# RESEARCH NOTE: Exploring the Competence of Various Poultry Species for Cache Valley virus Infection

**Authors:** Krisangel López, John A. Muller, Manette Tanelus, Dawn I. Auguste, William B. Stone, Sally L. Paulson, Amy Rizzo, Chad E. Mire, Albert J. Auguste

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2025.105379 · Poultry Science · 2025-05-30

## TL;DR

This study explores whether Cache Valley virus can infect poultry species and finds that while it grows well in avian cells, it does not cause symptoms in live birds.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the in-vivo and in-vitro competence of poultry species for Cache Valley virus infection.

## Key findings

- CVV grew rapidly and to high titers in three avian cell lines.
- CVV failed to induce symptomatic infection in SPF-chickens, ducklings, and quail.
- Poultry species are likely not significant contributors to the maintenance of CVV.

## Abstract

Cache Valley virus (CVV) belongs to the genus Orthobunyavirus, and is known to cause severe disease in ruminants, including spontaneous abortions and congenital defects. Previous evidence suggests there is the potential of CVV to infect poultry species due to its wide geographic range, reports of seropositivity in birds for Cholul or Maguari virus (closely related viruses), and isolations of CVV from highly ornithophilic mosquito vectors. To determine CVV’s potential as a disease-causing agent in poultry species, we used two strains from the two recognized genetic lineages of CVV for both our in-vivo and in-vitro studies. We assessed CVV’s growth kinetics in three avian cells lines, including domestic chicken (Gallus gallus; DF-1), Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica: QNR/K2), and Pekin Duck cells (Anas platyrhynchos domesticus: PDE). For the in-vivo studies, we challenged three-day old SPF-chickens (Gallus gallus), three-day old ducklings (Anas platyrhynchos domesticus), and 14-day old quail (Coturnix coturnix) with both CVV strains. We found that CVV grew rapidly and to high titers in all three avian cell lines yet failed to induce a symptomatic infection during in-vivo studies. Our data suggests that domestic poultry species are likely not significant contributors to the maintenance of CVV. However, further studies using passerines and mosquito transmission experiments are necessary to determine if CVV has the potential to impact avian species.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Gallus gallus (taxon 9031)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Cache Valley virus Infection (MESH:D003047), congenital defects (MESH:D000013), infection (MESH:D007239), spontaneous abortions (MESH:D000022)
- **Species:** Coturnix coturnix (Common quail, species) [taxon 9091], Gallus gallus (bantam, species) [taxon 9031], Ollusvirus culvertonense (species) [taxon 2845707], Cache Valley virus (no rank) [taxon 80935], Maguari virus (no rank) [taxon 11575], Anas platyrhynchos (duck, species) [taxon 8839], Coturnix japonica (Japanese quail, species) [taxon 93934]
- **Cell lines:** QNR/K2 — Coturnix japonica (Japanese quail), Transformed cell line (CVCL_3780), DF-1 — Gallus gallus (Chicken), Spontaneously immortalized cell line (CVCL_XF08)

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12210302/full.md

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12210302/full.md

## References

10 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12210302/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12210302