Genetic Diversity of Porcine Circovirus 2 in Wild Boar and Domestic Pigs in Ukraine.
Authors
Rudova, Nataliia
Buttler, Jeremy
Sushko, Mykola
Bolotin, Vitaliy
Muzykina, Larysa
Stegniy, Borys
Dunaiev, Yurii
Sytiuk, Mykola
Gerilovych, Anton
Solodiankin, Oleksii
Publication Date
2022-04-28Journal Title
Viruses
ISSN
1999-4915
Publisher
MDPI AG
Volume
14
Issue
5
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Rudova, N., Buttler, J., Kovalenko, G., Sushko, M., Bolotin, V., Muzykina, L., Zinenko, O., et al. (2022). Genetic Diversity of Porcine Circovirus 2 in Wild Boar and Domestic Pigs in Ukraine.. Viruses, 14 (5) https://doi.org/10.3390/v14050924
Description
Funder: Ukraine State Scientific Program: National Scientific Center; Grant(s): NSC IECVM #38.01.02.01
Abstract
Porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) is responsible for a number of porcine circovirus-associated diseases (PCVAD) that can severely impact domestic pig herds. For a non-enveloped virus with a small genome (1.7 kb ssDNA), PCV2 is remarkably diverse, with eight genotypes (a-h). New genotypes of PCV2 can spread through the migration of wild boar, which are thought to infect domestic pigs and spread further through the domestic pig trade. Despite a large swine population, the diversity of PCV2 genotypes in Ukraine has been under-sampled, with few PCV2 genome sequences reported in the past decade. To gain a deeper understanding of PCV2 genotype diversity in Ukraine, samples of blood serum were collected from wild boars (n = 107) that were hunted in Ukraine during the November-December 2012 hunting season. We found 34/107 (31.8%) prevalence of PCV2 by diagnostic PCR. For domestic pigs, liver samples (n = 16) were collected from a commercial market near Kharkiv in 2019, of which 6 out of 16 (37%) samples were positive for PCV2. We sequenced the genotyping locus ORF2, a gene encoding the PCV2 viral capsid (Cap), for 11 wild boar and six domestic pig samples in Ukraine using an Oxford Nanopore MinION device. Of 17 samples with resolved genotypes, the PCV2 genotype b was the most common in wild boar samples (10 out of 11, 91%), while the domestic pigs were infected with genotypes b and d. We also detected genotype b/d and b/a co-infections in wild boars and domestic pigs, respectively, and for the first time in Ukraine we detected genotype f in a wild boar from Poltava. Building a maximum-likelihood phylogeny, we identified a sublineage of PCV2 genotype b infections in both wild and domestic swine, suggesting a possible epizootic cluster and an ecological interaction between wild boar and domestic pig populations in northeastern Ukraine.
Keywords
porcine circovirus, PCV2, domestic pig, wild boar, genotype, phylogenetics, MinION, Ukraine
Sponsorship
Defense Threat Reduction Agency (HDTRA1-08-D-0007-0004)
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (2P20GM103395)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/v14050924
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/336652
Rights
Licence:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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