Abstract

BackgroundBovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) strains circulating in livestock herds show significant sequence variation. Conventional wisdom states that most sequence variation arises during acute infections in response to immune or other environmental pressures. A recent study showed that more nucleotide changes were introduced into the BVDV genomic RNA during the establishment of a single fetal persistent infection than following a series of acute infections of naïve cattle. However, it was not known if nucleotide changes were introduce when the virus crossed the placenta and infected the fetus or during the acute infection of the dam.MethodsThe sequence of the open reading frame (ORF) from viruses isolated from four acutely infected pregnant heifers following exposure to persistently infected (PI) calves was compared to the sequences of the virus from the progenitor PI calf and the virus from the resulting progeny PI calf to determine when genetic change was introduced. This was compared to genetic change found in viruses isolated from a pregnant PI cow and its PI calf, and in three viruses isolated from acutely infected, non-pregnant cattle exposed to PI calves.ResultsMost genetic changes previously identified between the progenitor and progeny PI viruses were in place in the acute phase viruses isolated from the dams six days post-exposure to the progenitor PI calf. Additionally, each progeny PI virus had two to three unique nucleotide substitutions that were introduced in crossing the placenta and infection of the fetus. The nucleotide sequence of two acute phase viruses isolated from steers exposed to PI calves revealed that six and seven nucleotide changes were introduced during the acute infection. The sequence of the BVDV-2 virus isolated from an acute infection of a PI calf (BVDV-1a) co-housed with a BVDV-2 PI calf had ten nucleotides that were different from the progenitor PI virus. Finally, twenty nucleotide changes were identified in the PI virus of a calf born to a PI dam.ConclusionsThese results demonstrate that nucleotide changes are introduced into the BVDV infecting pregnant cattle at rates of 2.3 to 8 fold higher then during the acute infection of non-pregnant animals.

Highlights

  • Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) strains circulating in livestock herds show significant sequence variation

  • To gain a greater understanding of the mechanism and timing of these changes, the open reading frame (ORF) of BVDV isolates from acute infections from pregnant and non-pregnant cattle exposed to persistently infected (PI) cattle were sequenced in this study

  • Comparisons were made of the progenitor and progeny PI viruses from our earlier study with the viruses isolated from the pregnant dams during the acute phase of the infection

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Summary

Introduction

Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) strains circulating in livestock herds show significant sequence variation. BVDV strains isolated from domestic livestock herds show considerable variability in nucleotide and amino acid sequences This variation led to the division of BVDV into two species, BVDV1 and BVDV2, and further divided type 1 viruses into more than 12 subgenotypes and type 2 viruses into 2 subgenotypes [1,2,3]. BVDV exists as a quasispecies, each viral genome possessing a small number of nucleotide and amino acid differences from the viral population consensus sequence [4,5] This sequence diversity allows a virus population to adapt to environmental stresses, such as immune pressure from an adaptive immune response or to quickly develop drug resistance [6,7,8]. A virus with amino acid substitutions that confer resistance or a growth advantage will quickly become the dominant virus in the population

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