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Virus adaptation and selection following challenge of animals vaccinated against classical swine fever virus

Authors :
Fahnøe, Ulrik
Pedersen, Anders Gorm
Johnston, Camille Melissa
Orton, Richard J.
Höper, Dirk
Beer, Martin
Bukh, Jens
Belsham, Graham J.
Rasmussen, Thomas Bruun
Fahnøe, Ulrik
Pedersen, Anders Gorm
Johnston, Camille Melissa
Orton, Richard J.
Höper, Dirk
Beer, Martin
Bukh, Jens
Belsham, Graham J.
Rasmussen, Thomas Bruun
Source :
Fahnøe , U , Pedersen , A G , Johnston , C M , Orton , R J , Höper , D , Beer , M , Bukh , J , Belsham , G J & Rasmussen , T B 2019 , ' Virus adaptation and selection following challenge of animals vaccinated against classical swine fever virus ' , Viruses , vol. 11 , no. 10 , 932 .
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Vaccines against classical swine fever have proven very effective in protecting pigs from this deadly disease. However, little is known about how vaccination impacts the selective pressures acting on the classical swine fever virus (CSFV). Here we use high-throughput sequencing of viral genomes to investigate evolutionary changes in virus populations following the challenge of naïve and vaccinated pigs with the highly virulent CSFV strain "Koslov". The challenge inoculum contained an ensemble of closely related viral sequences, with three major haplotypes being present, termed A, B, and C. After the challenge, the viral haplotype A was preferentially located within the tonsils of naïve animals but was highly prevalent in the sera of all vaccinated animals. We find that the viral population structure in naïve pigs after infection is very similar to that in the original inoculum. In contrast, the viral population in vaccinated pigs, which only underwent transient low-level viremia, displayed several distinct changes including the emergence of 16 unique non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that were not detectable in the challenge inoculum. Further analysis showed a significant loss of heterogeneity and an increasing positive selection acting on the virus populations in the vaccinated pigs. We conclude that vaccination imposes a strong selective pressure on viruses that subsequently replicate within the vaccinated animal.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Fahnøe , U , Pedersen , A G , Johnston , C M , Orton , R J , Höper , D , Beer , M , Bukh , J , Belsham , G J & Rasmussen , T B 2019 , ' Virus adaptation and selection following challenge of animals vaccinated against classical swine fever virus ' , Viruses , vol. 11 , no. 10 , 932 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1322734036
Document Type :
Electronic Resource