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Evaluation of the pathogenicity of mammalian orthoreovirus type 3 (MRV3) in germ-free gnotobiotic pigs and of the efficacy of an inactivated vaccine against MRV3 infection in neonatal conventional piglets. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - A new strain of mammalian orthoreovirus type 3 (MRV3) was identified in pigs with diarrhea in 2015 and was found to be highly pathogenic.
  • - Researchers developed an inactivated MRV3 vaccine and tested its effectiveness on piglets, finding that those born to vaccinated sows had lower viral shedding after exposure to the virus.
  • - Further studies on gnotobiotic pigs revealed that while they could be infected with MRV3, the disease was very mild, indicating the virus causes only slight diarrhea and that maternal immunity from vaccinated sows benefits neonatal pigs.

Article Abstract

A novel U.S. strain of mammalian orthoreovirus type 3 (MRV3) isolated from diarrheic pigs in 2015 was reportedly highly pathogenic in pigs. In this study, we first developed an inactivated MRV3 vaccine and determined its protective efficacy against MRV3 infection in conventional neonatal piglets. A pathogenicity study was also conducted in gnotobiotic pigs to further assess the pathogenicity of MRV3. To evaluate if piglets could be protected against MRV3 infection after immunization of pregnant sows with an inactivated MRV3 vaccine, pregnant sows were vaccinated with 2 or 3 doses of the vaccine or with PBS buffer. Four-day-old piglets born to vaccinated and unvaccinated sows were subsequently challenged with MRV3. The results showed that piglets born from vaccinated sows had lower levels of fecal viral RNA shedding at 1, 3, and 4 days post-challenge, suggesting that the inactivated MRV3 vaccine can reduce MRV3 replication. Surprisingly, although the conventional piglets were infected, they did not develop severe enteric disease as reported previously. Therefore, in an effort to further definitively assess the pathogenicity of MRV3, we experimentally infected gnotobiotic pigs, a more sensitive model for pathogenicity study, with the wild-type MRV3 virus. The infected gnotobiotic piglets all survived and exhibited only very mild diarrhea in some pigs. Taken together, the results indicate that the novel strain of MRV3 recently isolated in the United States infected but caused only very mild diarrhea in pigs, and that maternal immunity acquired from sows vaccinated with an inactivated vaccine can reduce MRV3 replication in neonatal pigs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2018.08.019DOI Listing

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