Genetic Determinants of Altered Virulence of Type O Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus
Fan Yang, Zixiang Zhu, Weijun Cao, Huanan Liu, Ting Wei, Min Zheng, Keshan Zhang, Jin Ye, Jijun He, Jianhong Guo, Xiangtao Liu, Haixue Zheng
Abstract
FMD is probably the most important livestock disease in the world due to the severe economic consequences caused. The alteration of several viral genes may give the virus selective advantage to maintain its prevalence in nature. Here, we identified that a 70-nucleotide deletion in the S fragment combined with a single leucine insertion in the leader protein (L pro ) is a novel determinant of restricted growth on bovine cells, which significantly contributes to the altered virulence of serotype O FMDV in cattle. A synergistic and additive effect of the 70-nucleotide deletion in the S fragment and the single leucine insertion in L pro on the virulence and host specificity of the virus was determined. These results will benefit efforts to understand the vial pathogenicity mechanism and molecular characteristics of FMDV.