Maternally-derived antibodies do not prevent transmission of swine influenza A virus between pigs

被引:0
作者
Charlie Cador
Séverine Hervé
Mathieu Andraud
Stéphane Gorin
Frédéric Paboeuf
Nicolas Barbier
Stéphane Quéguiner
Céline Deblanc
Gaëlle Simon
Nicolas Rose
机构
[1] French Agency for Food,Swine Epidemiology and Welfare Research Unit
[2] Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety (ANSES),Swine Virology Immunology Research Unit
[3] French Agency for Food,SPF Pig Production and Experimental Unit
[4] Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety (ANSES),undefined
[5] French Agency for Food,undefined
[6] Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety (ANSES),undefined
[7] Université Bretagne Loire,undefined
来源
Veterinary Research | / 47卷
关键词
Influenza; Reproduction Number; Contact Structure; Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus; Hemagglutination Inhibition;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A transmission experiment involving 5-week-old specific-pathogen-free (SPF) piglets, with (MDA+) or without maternally-derived antibodies (MDA−), was carried out to evaluate the impact of passive immunity on the transmission of a swine influenza A virus (swIAV). In each group (MDA+/MDA−), 2 seeders were placed with 4 piglets in direct contact and 5 in indirect contact (3 replicates per group). Serological kinetics (ELISA) and individual viral shedding (RT-PCR) were monitored for 28 days after infection. MDA waning was estimated using a nonlinear mixed-effects model and survival analysis. Differential transmission rates were estimated depending on the piglets’ initial serological status and contact structure (direct contact with pen-mates or indirect airborne contact). The time to MDA waning was 71.3 [52.8–92.1] days on average. The airborne transmission rate was 1.41 [0.64–2.63] per day. The compared shedding pattern between groups showed that MDA+ piglets had mainly a reduced susceptibility to infection compared to MDA− piglets. The resulting reproduction number estimated in MDA+ piglets (5.8 [1.4–18.9]), although 3 times lower than in MDA− piglets (14.8 [6.4–27.1]), was significantly higher than 1. Such an efficient and extended spread of swIAV at the population scale in the presence of MDAs could contribute to swIAV persistence on farms, given the fact that the period when transmission is expected to be impacted by the presence of MDAs can last up to 10 weeks.
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