Abstract

Infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) is an important viral disease of salmonids that can affect fish during various life cycles. In Atlantic salmon, selecting for genetically resistant fish against IPN has been one of the most highly praised success stories in the history of fish breeding. During the late 2000s, the findings that resistance against this disease has a significant genetic component, which is mainly controlled by variations in a single gene, have helped to reduce the IPN outbreaks to a great extent. In this paper, we present the identification of a new variant of the IPN virus from a field outbreak in Western Norway that had caused mortality, even in genetically resistant salmon. We recovered and assembled the full-length genome of this virus, following the deep-sequencing of the head-kidney transcriptome. The comparative sequence analysis revealed that for the critical amino acid motifs, previously found to be associated with the degree of virulence, the newly identified variant is similar to the virus’s avirulent form. However, we detected a set of deduced amino acid residues, particularly in the hypervariable domain of the VP2, that collectively are unique to this variant compared to all other reference sequences assessed in this study. We suggest that these mutations have likely equipped the virus with the capacity to escape the host defence mechanism more efficiently, even in the genetically deemed IPN resistant fish.

Highlights

  • Infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) is one of the leading viral diseases of the farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.)

  • This paper describes the genomic features of IPN virus (IPNV) isolates responsible for a field outbreak in an Atlantic salmon population

  • Assessment of the transcriptome sequence data confirmed that all fish carried at least one favorable copy of the causal mutation in the cdh1 gene, conferring resistance against IPNV (Moen et al, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) is one of the leading viral diseases of the farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.). The disease was first reported in 1941, following an outbreak in brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis L.) in Canada (M’Gonigle, 1941). In Norway, the virus was first isolated in 1975 from freshwater rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss L.) (Hastein and Krogsrud, 1976) and was designated as a notifiable disease from 1991 till 2008 (Sommerset et al, 2020). The virus can infect Atlantic salmon during all of its developmental stages, but the fish are especially susceptible as fry, during start-feeding, and post-smolts, soon after transfer to seawater (Roberts and Pearson, 2005; Sommerset et al, 2020).

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