Abstract

Piscine orthoreovirus-1 (PRV-1) is the causative agent of heart and skeletal muscle inflammation (HSMI) in farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). However, it has been shown that PRV-1 variants differ in their ability to induce HSMI. The objective of this work was to identify the PRV-1 variants in Norwegian aquaculture and their geographical distribution. Sequencing and subsequent analysis of the five genomic segments (S1, S4, M2, L1 and L2) putatively linked to virulence, made out the basis of the study. Thirty-seven Norwegian PRV-1 isolates were sequenced, and they grouped into eight genogroups based on combinations of the five analyzed genomic segments. Two groups were defined as high-virulent and two low-virulent, based on comparison with PRV-1 reference isolates with known virulence. The remaining four groups were of unknown virulence. The geographic distribution indicated a higher frequency of the high-virulent isolates in the mid- and northern regions. The present study confirms circulation of both high- and low-virulent isolates of PRV-1 in farmed Atlantic salmon in Norway. To reduce the impact of PRV-1 related disease, detection and differentiation between high- and low-virulent genogroups of PRV-1 could be a targeted approach for reduction of high-virulent variants.

Highlights

  • Piscine orthoreovirus is a widespread virus in salmonid fish, with three strains Piscine orthoreovirus-1 (PRV-1), PRV-2, PRV-3, which are associated with different diseases in different salmonid species [1]

  • The results suggest that most PRV-1 isolates found in the Atlantic salmon production in Norway today cluster to the S1 (σ3) Group B

  • The aim of the present study was to group PRV-1 variants present in Norwegian aquaculture based on their virulence properties

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Summary

Introduction

Piscine orthoreovirus is a widespread virus in salmonid fish, with three strains PRV-1, PRV-2, PRV-3, which are associated with different diseases in different salmonid species [1]. The PRV-1 is the causative agent of heart and skeletal muscle inflammation (HSMI) in farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). The virus can be found in fish from farms with HSMI outbreak as well as in farms where the disease has not been observed [2, 3]. HSMI was first described in 1999 [7], and today more than 100 outbreak are reported in Norway annually [8]. This could be an underestimation as HSMI was removed from the list of notifiable diseases in Norway 2014 and no longer mandatory to report. In Canada as well as Faroe Islands, little clinical disease has been

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