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Viral Dose and Immunosuppression Modulate the Progression of Acute BVDV-1 Infection in Calves: Evidence of Long Term Persistence after Intra-Nasal Infection

Bovine viral diarrhoea virus (BVDV) infection of cattle causes a diverse range of clinical outcomes from being asymptomatic, or a transient mild disease, to producing severe cases of acute disease leading to death. Four groups of calves were challenged with a type 1 BVDV strain, originating from a s...

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Autores principales: Strong, Rebecca, La Rocca, Severina Anna, Paton, David, Bensaude, Emmanuelle, Sandvik, Torstein, Davis, Leanne, Turner, Jane, Drew, Trevor, Raue, Rudiger, Vangeel, Ilse, Steinbach, Falko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4425503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25955849
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124689
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author Strong, Rebecca
La Rocca, Severina Anna
Paton, David
Bensaude, Emmanuelle
Sandvik, Torstein
Davis, Leanne
Turner, Jane
Drew, Trevor
Raue, Rudiger
Vangeel, Ilse
Steinbach, Falko
author_facet Strong, Rebecca
La Rocca, Severina Anna
Paton, David
Bensaude, Emmanuelle
Sandvik, Torstein
Davis, Leanne
Turner, Jane
Drew, Trevor
Raue, Rudiger
Vangeel, Ilse
Steinbach, Falko
author_sort Strong, Rebecca
collection PubMed
description Bovine viral diarrhoea virus (BVDV) infection of cattle causes a diverse range of clinical outcomes from being asymptomatic, or a transient mild disease, to producing severe cases of acute disease leading to death. Four groups of calves were challenged with a type 1 BVDV strain, originating from a severe outbreak of BVDV in England, to study the effect of viral dose and immunosuppression on the viral replication and transmission of BVDV. Three groups received increasing amounts of virus: Group A received 10(2.55)TCID(50)/ml, group B 10(5.25)TCID(50)/ml and group C 10(6.7)TCID (50)/ml. A fourth group (D) was inoculated with a medium dose (10(5.25)TCID(50)/ml) and concomitantly treated with dexamethasone (DMS) to assess the effects of chemically induced immunosuppression. Naïve calves were added as sentinel animals to assess virus transmission. The outcome of infection was dose dependent with animals given a higher dose developing severe disease and more pronounced viral replication. Despite virus being shed by the low-dose infection group, BVD was not transmitted to sentinel calves. Administration of dexamethasone (DMS) resulted in more severe clinical signs, prolonged viraemia and virus shedding. Using PCR techniques, viral RNA was detected in blood, several weeks after the limit of infectious virus recovery. Finally, a recently developed strand-specific RT-PCR detected negative strand viral RNA, indicative of actively replicating virus, in blood samples from convalescent animals, as late as 85 days post inoculation. This detection of long term replicating virus may indicate the way in which the virus persists and/or is reintroduced within herds.
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spelling pubmed-44255032015-05-21 Viral Dose and Immunosuppression Modulate the Progression of Acute BVDV-1 Infection in Calves: Evidence of Long Term Persistence after Intra-Nasal Infection Strong, Rebecca La Rocca, Severina Anna Paton, David Bensaude, Emmanuelle Sandvik, Torstein Davis, Leanne Turner, Jane Drew, Trevor Raue, Rudiger Vangeel, Ilse Steinbach, Falko PLoS One Research Article Bovine viral diarrhoea virus (BVDV) infection of cattle causes a diverse range of clinical outcomes from being asymptomatic, or a transient mild disease, to producing severe cases of acute disease leading to death. Four groups of calves were challenged with a type 1 BVDV strain, originating from a severe outbreak of BVDV in England, to study the effect of viral dose and immunosuppression on the viral replication and transmission of BVDV. Three groups received increasing amounts of virus: Group A received 10(2.55)TCID(50)/ml, group B 10(5.25)TCID(50)/ml and group C 10(6.7)TCID (50)/ml. A fourth group (D) was inoculated with a medium dose (10(5.25)TCID(50)/ml) and concomitantly treated with dexamethasone (DMS) to assess the effects of chemically induced immunosuppression. Naïve calves were added as sentinel animals to assess virus transmission. The outcome of infection was dose dependent with animals given a higher dose developing severe disease and more pronounced viral replication. Despite virus being shed by the low-dose infection group, BVD was not transmitted to sentinel calves. Administration of dexamethasone (DMS) resulted in more severe clinical signs, prolonged viraemia and virus shedding. Using PCR techniques, viral RNA was detected in blood, several weeks after the limit of infectious virus recovery. Finally, a recently developed strand-specific RT-PCR detected negative strand viral RNA, indicative of actively replicating virus, in blood samples from convalescent animals, as late as 85 days post inoculation. This detection of long term replicating virus may indicate the way in which the virus persists and/or is reintroduced within herds. Public Library of Science 2015-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4425503/ /pubmed/25955849 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124689 Text en © 2015 Strong et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Strong, Rebecca
La Rocca, Severina Anna
Paton, David
Bensaude, Emmanuelle
Sandvik, Torstein
Davis, Leanne
Turner, Jane
Drew, Trevor
Raue, Rudiger
Vangeel, Ilse
Steinbach, Falko
Viral Dose and Immunosuppression Modulate the Progression of Acute BVDV-1 Infection in Calves: Evidence of Long Term Persistence after Intra-Nasal Infection
title Viral Dose and Immunosuppression Modulate the Progression of Acute BVDV-1 Infection in Calves: Evidence of Long Term Persistence after Intra-Nasal Infection
title_full Viral Dose and Immunosuppression Modulate the Progression of Acute BVDV-1 Infection in Calves: Evidence of Long Term Persistence after Intra-Nasal Infection
title_fullStr Viral Dose and Immunosuppression Modulate the Progression of Acute BVDV-1 Infection in Calves: Evidence of Long Term Persistence after Intra-Nasal Infection
title_full_unstemmed Viral Dose and Immunosuppression Modulate the Progression of Acute BVDV-1 Infection in Calves: Evidence of Long Term Persistence after Intra-Nasal Infection
title_short Viral Dose and Immunosuppression Modulate the Progression of Acute BVDV-1 Infection in Calves: Evidence of Long Term Persistence after Intra-Nasal Infection
title_sort viral dose and immunosuppression modulate the progression of acute bvdv-1 infection in calves: evidence of long term persistence after intra-nasal infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4425503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25955849
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124689
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