As an emerging disease, the porcine epidemic diarrhoea virus has caused substantial economic losses to the pork industry in Mexico, leading to piglet mortality rates of up to 100%. For detection, sequencing and genetic characterization of the virus, 68 samples of one-week-old piglets from pork farms in 17 states of Mexico were analysed. In total, 53 samples were positive by real-time RT-PCR, confirming the presence of the virus in 15 states. Twenty-eight samples from 10 states were amplified by endpoint RT-PCR, and 20 sequences of the spike gene were obtained. A phylogenetic analysis based on the spike gene demonstrated that all Mexican strains are in Group II and are classified as non-Indel-S emerging variants. Three strains showed amino acid insertions: PEDv/MEX/GTO/LI-DMZC15/2015 and PEDv/MEX/QRO/LI-DMZC45/2016 showed one amino acid insertion ( Y and D , respectively), and PEDv/MEX/QRO/LI-DMZC49/2019 showed one and two amino acid insertions ( C and SQ ), with the second insertion in the COE region. These results provide evidence of the prevalence of emerging, non-Indel-S strains of the virus are currently circulating in Mexico during 2016-2018, when three of which have amino acid insertions: PEDv/MEX/GTO/IN-DMZC15/2015 and PEDv/MEX/QRO/IN-DMZC45/2016 have one amino acid insertion each ( Y and D , respectively), and PEDv/MEX/QRO/IN-DMZC49/2019 has one ( C ) and two amino acid insertions ( SQ ), the latter being in the COE region, which could generate new antigenic variants.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7159366 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/tbed.13426 | DOI Listing |
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