Abstract

SummaryThe outbreak of bluetongue virus (BTV) serotype 8 (BTV‐8) during 2006–2009 in Europe was the most costly epidemic of the virus in recorded history. In 2015, a BTV‐8 strain re‐emerged in France which has continued to circulate since then. To examine anecdotal reports of reduced pathogenicity and transmission efficiency, we investigated the infection kinetics of a 2007 UK BTV‐8 strain alongside the re‐emerging BTV‐8 strain isolated from France in 2017. Two groups of eight BTV‐naïve British mule sheep were inoculated with 5.75 log10TCID50/ml of either BTV‐8 strain. BTV RNA was detected by 2 dpi in both groups with peak viraemia occurring between 5–9 dpi. A significantly greater amount of BTV RNA was detected in sheep infected with the 2007 strain (6.0–8.8 log10 genome copies/ml) than the re‐emerging BTV‐8 strain (2.9–7.9 log10 genome copies/ml). All infected sheep developed BTV‐specific antibodies by 9 dpi. BTV was isolated from 2 dpi to 12 dpi for 2007 BTV‐8‐inoculated sheep and from 5 to 10 dpi for sheep inoculated with the remerging BTV‐8. In Culicoides sonorensis feeding on the sheep over the period 7–12 dpi, vector competence was significantly higher for the 2007 strain than the re‐emerging strain. Both the proportion of animals showing moderate (as opposed to mild or no) clinical disease (6/8 vs. 1/8) and the overall clinical scores (median 5.25 vs. 3) were significantly higher in sheep infected with the 2007 strain, compared to those infected with the re‐emerging strain. However, one sheep infected with the re‐emerging strain was euthanized at 16 dpi having developed severe lameness. This highlights the potential of the re‐emerging BTV‐8 to still cause illness in naïve ruminants with concurrent costs to the livestock industry.

Highlights

  • Bluetongue (BT) is an infectious hemorrhagic disease of ruminants caused by bluetongue virus (BTV) which is transmitted via Culicoides biting midges (Carpenter et al, 2013)

  • Summary: The re-emerging Bluetongue virus serotype 8 still presents a threat to naïve ruminants in Europe despite reduced virulence

  • In 2015, a BTV serotype 8 (BTV-8) strain re-emerged in France which has continued to circulate since

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Summary

Introduction

Bluetongue (BT) is an infectious hemorrhagic disease of ruminants caused by bluetongue virus (BTV) which is transmitted via Culicoides biting midges (Carpenter et al, 2013). The BTV genome is comprised of 10 double-stranded RNA segments encoding several structural and nonstructural proteins. BTV segment-2 encodes the most variable BTV protein (VP2). Since 1998, a number of BTV serotypes have caused both sporadic and widespread incursions into the EU (Belbis et al, 2017). In August 2006, a BTV serotype 8 (BTV-8) strain of sub-Saharan origin (Maan et al, 2008) was detected within animal holdings in The Netherlands, the first time that the virus had been identified in northern Europe. This BTV-8 strain successfully re-emerged in 2007 and subsequently spread throughout most northern

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