Viral Fitness and Antigenic Determinants of Porcine Parvovirus at the Amino Acid Level of the Capsid Protein
André Felipe Streck, Cláudio Wageck Canal, Uwe Truyen
Abstract
Porcine parvovirus is one of the most important causes of reproductive failure in swine. Recently, despite the continuous use of vaccines, "new" strains emerged, leading to the hypothesis that the emergence of new amino acid substitutions could be a viral adaptation to the immune response against the commercial vaccines. Our results indicate the amino acid substitutions observed in the 27a-like strains can modify viral fitness and antigenicity. However, an absolute immune escape was not evident.
Topics & Concepts
BiologyCapsidParvovirusVirologyEpitopeMinute virus of miceAmino acidVirusPorcine parvovirusParvoviridaeViral replicationAntigenic variationNeutralizationViral evolutionMutantCanine parvovirusViral proteinAntibodyImmune systemImmunogenicityAntigenStrain (injury)MutationPeptide sequenceMonoclonal antibodyNeutralizing antibodyViral structural proteinViral envelopeGenetic FitnessAnimal Virus Infections StudiesVirus-based gene therapy researchAnimal health and immunology