Abstract

BackgroundLittle information is known about viral distribution and transmission of porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) in species other than swine. It is still a debated topic whether the PCV2 could be infected and caused clinical lesions. Our study is aimed to estimate the susceptibility of Kunming mouse to PCV2. Forty-eight, 6-week-old Kunming mice were randomly divided into four groups. Group A (C1-C12) was inoculated with PK-15 cell culture as a control group. Group B (sPCV1-12) was inoculated orally and intramuscularly with PCV2 (106.2TCID50/ml). Group C (mPCV1-12) was inoculated orally and intramuscularly with PCV2 (106.2TCID50/ml) and a booster inoculation at days 14 and 28 after the first inoculation. Group D (MixPCV1-12) was unvaccinated but released into Group C. Each group was sacrificed at 7, 14, 28, and 42 days post-inoculation, respectively. Necropsy was checked on every mouse. Sera samples were collected for the test of PCV2 specific antibody. Tissues were collected for histopathology study and polymerase chain reaction (PCR).ResultsThe results showed that viral replication, seroconversion, and microscopic lesions were found in inoculated mice. Continuous existence of PCV2 viruses in lymph nodes have been confirmed by PCR, which took at least seven days for the virus to be transferred into other organs from the primary interface, and the diffusion to thymus had been retarded for seven days. Special PCV2 antibody could be found in PCV2 inoculation mice and was significantly higher than that in the control. Further more, microscopic lesions and the main target of PCV2 focused in the lymph nodes with a characteristic depletion and occasional necrosis of lymphocytes in the cortex and paracortex were found in inoculated mice.ConclusionsThe Kunming mouse could be infected by PCV2 virus and used as a PCV2 infected experimental model.

Highlights

  • Little information is known about viral distribution and transmission of porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) in species other than swine

  • Clinical PMWS had been reproduced in gnotobiotic pigs co-infected with PCV2 and porcine parvovirus (PPV) [5,8], no clinical PMWS found in gnotobiotic pigs for just being infected with PCV2 alone [8,9]

  • Distribution of PCV2 in different organs clarified by polymerase chain reaction The fresh tissues of heart, liver, spleen, lung, kidney, thymus, lymph node, jejunum, ileum, cecum, colon, tongue and brain of each mouse were supplied for PCR

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Summary

Introduction

Little information is known about viral distribution and transmission of porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) in species other than swine. It is still a debated topic whether the PCV2 could be infected and caused clinical lesions. Our study is aimed to estimate the susceptibility of Kunming mouse to PCV2. Group B (sPCV1-12) was inoculated orally and intramuscularly with PCV2 (106.2TCID50/ml). Group C (mPCV1-12) was inoculated orally and intramuscularly with PCV2 (106.2TCID50/ml) and a booster inoculation at days 14 and 28 after the first inoculation. Porcine Circovirus (PCV), a member of genus Circovirus of the Circoviridae family, was first isolated as a non-cytopathic contaminant of a porcine kidney cell line (PK-15) and has been characterized as a small icosahedral DNA virus [1,2,3], which was the primary causative agent of an emerging swine disease- postweaning multisystemic. Whether PCV2 can infect mice or other mammalian species is still a debated topic. The aim of this study was to make sure whether PCV2 could replicate and distribute in Kunming mouse

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