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Replication Kinetics and Infectivity of African Swine Fever Virus (ASFV) Variants with Different Genotypes or Levels of Virulence in Cell Culture Models of Primary Porcine Macrophages

Authors :
Brecht Droesbeke
Nadège Balmelle
Ann Brigitte Cay
Shaojie Han
Dayoung Oh
Hans J. Nauwynck
Marylène Tignon
Source :
Microbiology Research, Vol 15, Iss 3, Pp 1690-1708 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2024.

Abstract

African Swine Fever (ASF) is a devastating viral hemorrhagic disease that causes high morbidity and mortality in domestic pigs and wild boars, severely impacting the swine industry. The etiologic agent, African Swine Fever virus (ASFV), mainly infects myeloid cells of the swine mononuclear phagocytic system (MPS). For other porcine viruses, in vitro culture models with primary cells are widely used as they mimic the in vivo viral replication behavior better compared to continuous cell lines. Our study validates this possible correlation for ASFV using cell culture models established for three different porcine macrophages, isolated from the lungs (porcine alveolar macrophages), blood (monocyte-derived macrophages) and spleen (spleen macrophages). The cells were infected with two genotype I and two genotype II strains with different pathogenic potential in vivo. The highly virulent strains replicated better in general than the low-virulent strains. This was most pronounced in monocyte-derived macrophages, although only statistically significant 18 h post-infection (hpi) in the intracellular genomic ASFV copies between E70 and the low-virulent strains. For this reason, we conclude that the different replication characteristics between the strains with different virulence do not proportionally represent the differences in pathology seen between the strains in vivo. Additionally, ASFV-positive cells were observed earlier in monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) compared to the alveolar and spleen macrophages, subsequently leading to an earlier rise in extracellular virus, and, ultimately, more MDMs were infected at the end of sampling. For these reasons, we propose MDMs as the best-suited cell type to study ASFV.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20367481
Volume :
15
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Microbiology Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.604ebe4b174f849813fa524f6777d6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/microbiolres15030112