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A reassortant G3P[12] rotavirus A strain associated with severe enteritis in donkeys ( Equus asinus )

Authors :
Shuguang Li
Yuan Dongfang
Nanako Yamashita
Suo Jiajia
Du Yan
Dong Jianbao
Guiqin Liu
Jelle Matthijnssens
Takeshi Haga
Gao Nannan
Jun Zhang
Zhu Wei
Frank R. Cook
Source :
Equine Veterinary Journal. 54:114-120
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND In contrast to horses, the only evidence suggesting gastrointestinal disease in neonatal donkeys is associated with Group A rotaviruses (RVAs) is the detection of viral antigens by ELISA in just 1 of 82 symptomatic donkey foals. No additional, more comprehensive investigations have been conducted, and RVAs if circulating in donkey populations have not been molecularly characterised. OBJECTIVES To investigate if RVAs are associated with an outbreak of severe enteritis in neonatal donkeys and if associated determine the genotype(s) along with the phylogenetic relationship to RVA strains circulating in horses. STUDY DESIGN Cross-sectional. METHODS RT-PCR-based techniques were used for RVA diagnosis and gene amplification. Statistical significance was determined by Chi-square and Fisher's exact two-sided tests. Genotyping was performed by RotaC and phylogenetic analysis by neighbour joining. RESULTS In 2019, acute enteritis occurred in 119 of 206 donkey foals (≤4 months) at two intensive donkey farms in the Shandong province of China. The highest morbidity (68.1%), mortality (29.5%) and fatality levels (45.5%) occurred in foals in the 30-89 day, 30-59 day and 0-29 day age groups respectively. RVA gene sequences were detected in 107 (89.9%) of the symptomatic individuals while further analysis demonstrated the outbreak was associated with the same G3P[12] RVA strain designated RVA/Donkey-wt/CHN/Don01/2019/G3P[12]. Although the VP4 gene of Don01 exhibited close phylogenetic relationships with equivalent RVA sequences commonly circulating in horses, encoding VP7 was more closely associated with sequences isolated from bats suggesting this new donkey strain arose via an intergenogroup reassortment event. MAIN LIMITATIONS Actual prevalence not determined because

Details

ISSN :
20423306 and 04251644
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Equine Veterinary Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b6ded050fd48d0cfee2db4973b1f7490