Abstract

Vaccination against lumpy skin disease (LSD) is crucial for maintaining the health of animals and the economic sustainability of farming. Either homologous vaccines consisting of live attenuated LSD virus (LSDV) or heterologous vaccines consisting of live attenuated sheeppox or goatpox virus (SPPV/GPPV) can be used for control of LSDV. Although SPPV/GTPV-based vaccines exhibit slightly lower efficacy than live attenuated LSDV vaccines, they do not cause vaccine-induced viremia, fever, and clinical symptoms of the disease following vaccination, caused by the replication capacity of live attenuated LSDVs. Recombination of capripoxviruses in the field was a long-standing hypothesis until a naturally occurring recombinant LSDV vaccine isolate was detected in Russia, where the sheeppox vaccine alone is used. This occurred after the initiation of vaccination campaigns using LSDV vaccines in the neighboring countries in 2017, when the first cases of presumed vaccine-like isolate circulation were documented with concurrent detection of a recombinant vaccine isolate in the field. The follow-up findings presented herein show that during the period from 2015 to 2018, the molecular epidemiology of LSDV in Russia split into two independent waves. The 2015–2016 epidemic was attributable to the field isolate. Whereas the 2017 epidemic and, in particular, the 2018 epidemic represented novel disease importations that were not genetically linked to the 2015–2016 field-type incursions. This demonstrated a new emergence rather than the continuation of the field-type epidemic. Since recombinant vaccine-like LSDV isolates appear to have entrenched across the country’s border, the policy of using certain live vaccines requires revision in the context of the biosafety threat it presents.

Highlights

  • Lumpy skin disease virus (LSDV) is a capripoxvirus belonging to the family Poxviridae

  • We provided an overview of LSDV evolution in Russia since the first incursions that began in North Caucasus in 2015 an extended Eastward along the border of Kazakhstan

  • The analysis of Russian LSDV isolates obtained during outbreaks in 2015–2018 is described

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Summary

Introduction

Lumpy skin disease virus (LSDV) is a capripoxvirus belonging to the family Poxviridae. It comprises a viral genome constituting double-stranded DNA of ~150 kbp [1]. LSDV shares over 97% sequence identity with viruses of the genus Capripoxvirus, including the sheep and goat pox viruses. Resurgence of recombinant vaccine-like LSDV demonstrated that capripoxviruses and other members of the family Poxviridae might have originated from a single ancestral strain through gene gain and loss [2,3,4,5]. Cattle and water buffalos are susceptible to LSDV virus and may develop pox lesions on the skin and internal organs when infected [6,7]. Outbreaks are accompanied by high morbidity but low mortality, inflicting considerable economic losses [8,9]

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