Abstract

Transmission of bluetongue (BT) virus serotype 8 (BTV-8) via artificial insemination of contaminated frozen semen from naturally infected bulls was investigated in two independent experiments. Healthy, BT negative heifers were hormonally synchronized and artificially inseminated at oestrus. In total, six groups of three heifers received semen from four batches derived from three bulls naturally infected with BTV-8. Each experiment included one control heifer that was not inseminated and that remained BT negative throughout. BTV viraemia and seroconversion were determined in 8 out of 18 inseminated heifers, and BTV was isolated from five of these animals. These eight heifers only displayed mild clinical signs of BT, if any at all, but six of them experienced pregnancy loss between weeks four and eight of gestation, and five of them became BT PCR and antibody positive. The other two infected heifers gave birth at term to two healthy and BT negative calves. The BT viral load varied among the semen batches used and this had a significant impact on the infection rate, the time of onset of viraemia post artificial insemination, and the gestational stage at which pregnancy loss occurred. These results, which confirm unusual features of BTV-8 infection, should not be extrapolated to infection with other BTV strains without thorough evaluation. This study also adds weight to the hypothesis that the re-emergence of BTV-8 in France in 2015 may be attributable to the use of contaminated bovine semen.

Highlights

  • Bluetongue virus (BTV) is the etiologic agent of bluetongue (BT), a noncontagious, vector-borne disease of domestic and wild ruminants [1].BT occurs worldwide and is classified by the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE)as a notifiable disease

  • All animals were negative for BTV, bovine viral diarrhoea virus (BVD), infectious bovine rhinotracheitis (IBR), enzootic bovine leucosis (EBL), Neospora and Q Fever antibodies, and negative for the presence of viral genome of BTV, BVD and IBR before transport from

  • All eight heifers that became infected in the present study developed and maintained high antibody levels, regardless of whether or not they had shown clinical signs or prolonged viraemia

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Summary

Introduction

It mainly affects sheep, while in other ruminants BT is typically asymptomatic, except in white tailed deer [2,3]. Sheep, white tailed deer and red deer are central to the epidemiology of BTV infection because they can remain viraemic for up to several weeks and serve as reservoir hosts from which biting midges (Culicoides spp.). Can transmit BTV to other susceptible host animals [3,4,5,6]. BT epizootics can have a severe socioeconomic impact [7], impacting on cattle and sheep farmers through productivity loss, restrictions and/or onerous regulatory requirements for international trade in livestock and germplasm [8]. BTV-8 emerged in West-Central Europe in August 2006, infecting susceptible livestock in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg, and Northern

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