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Evaluation in Swine of a Recombinant African Swine Fever Virus Lacking the MGF-360-1L Gene

Elizabeth Ramírez-Medina, Elizabeth A. Vuono, Ayushi Rai, Sarah Pruitt, Ediane Silva, Lauro Velázquez-Salinas, James Zhu, Douglas P. Gladue, Manuel V. Borca

2020Viruses28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The African swine fever (ASF) pandemic is currently affecting pigs throughout Eurasia, resulting in significant swine production losses. The causative agent, ASF virus (ASFV), is a large, structurally complex virus with a genome encoding more than 160 genes. The function of most of those genes remains unknown. Here, we presented the previously uncharacterized ASFV gene MGF360-1L, the first gene in the genome. The kinetic studies of virus RNA transcription demonstrated that the MGF360-1L gene was transcribed as a late virus protein. The essentiality of MGF360-1L to virus replication was evaluated by developing a recombinant ASFV lacking the gene (ASFV-G-ΔMGF360-1L). In primary swine macrophage cell cultures, ASFV-G-ΔMGF360-1L showed similar replication kinetics as the parental highly virulent field isolate Georgia2007 (ASFV-G). Domestic pigs experimentally infected with ASFV-G-ΔMGF360-1L presented with a clinical disease indistinguishable from that caused by ASFV-G, demonstrating that MGF360-1L was not involved in virulence in swine, the natural host of ASFV.

Topics & Concepts

African swine fever virusBiologyGeneVirologyVirusVirulenceGenomeRecombinant DNAViral replicationGeneticsAnimal Disease Management and EpidemiologyVector-Borne Animal DiseasesViral Infections and Immunology Research
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