Abstract

The evolution of Marek’s disease virus (MDV, Gallid herpesvirus 2) has threatened the sustainability of poultry farming in the past and its continued evolution remains a concern. Genetic diversity is key to understanding evolution, yet little is known about the diversity of MDV in the poultry industry. Here, we investigate the diversity of MDV on 19 Pennsylvanian poultry farms over a 3-year period. Using eight polymorphic markers, we found that at least twelve MDV haplotypes were co-circulating within a radius of 40 km. MDV diversity showed no obvious spatial clustering nor any apparent clustering by bird line: all of the virus haplotypes identified on the commercial farms could be found within a single, commonly reared bird line. On some farms, a single virus haplotype dominated for an extended period of time, while on other farms the observed haplotypes changed over time. In some instances, multiple haplotypes were found simultaneously on a farm, and even within a single dust sample. On one farm, co-occurring haplotypes clustered into phylogenetically distinct clades, putatively assigned as high and low virulence pathotypes. Although the vast majority of our samples came from commercial poultry farms, we found the most haplotype diversity on a noncommercial backyard farm experiencing an outbreak of clinical Marek’s disease. Future work to explore the evolutionary potential of MDV might therefore direct efforts toward farms that harbor multiple virus haplotypes, including both backyard farms and farms experiencing clinical Marek’s disease.

Highlights

  • Marek’s disease virus (MDV) is a highly contagious oncogenic herpesvirus that costs the global poultry industry more than$US1 billion annually (Morrow and Fehler 2004)

  • We report a genetic analysis of archival MDV-positive samples collected on 19 Pennsylvanian farms over a period of 3 years

  • To our knowledge no study has previously attempted to describe the molecular epidemiology of MDV in the field using multiple genetic markers

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Summary

Introduction

Marek’s disease virus (MDV) is a highly contagious oncogenic herpesvirus that costs the global poultry industry more than. $US1 billion annually (Morrow and Fehler 2004). Over the second half of last century, MDV evolved in two notable ways. Viral evolution eroded the efficacy of initially very protective vaccines (Witter 1997).

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