Domestic Pigs are Susceptible to Experimental Infection with Non-Human Primate-Derived Reston Virus Without the Need for Adaptation

Author:

Lewis Charles E.1,Pinette Mathieu M.2,Lakin Steven M.3,Smith Greg2,Fisher Mathew2,Moffat Estella2,Embury-Hyatt Carissa2,Pickering Brad S.2

Affiliation:

1. Iowa State University

2. National Centre for Foreign Animal Diseases, Canadian Food Inspection Agency

3. United States Department of Agriculture

Abstract

Abstract Domestic pigs are a critical component of the food supply and one of the most commonly raised production animals. Pork consumption has driven the intensification of pig production expanding into environments conducive to increased emergence and spread of infectious diseases, including the spillover of pathogens into human populations. One of these emerging viruses, Reston virus (RESTV), is an enigma among the Ebolavirus genus in that its lack of human pathogenicity is in stark contrast to the high virulence associated with most other ebolaviruses. RESTV is, however, associated with outbreaks of highly lethal hemorrhagic disease in non-human primates (NHP), as well as poorly understood clinical manifestations of mixed virulence and lethality in naturally and experimentally infected domestic pigs. Our results show it is possible for RESTV derived from an NHP to infect domestic pigs resulting in a spectrum of disease, from asymptomatic to severe respiratory distress. Further, we report on the first experimental transmission of RESTV between infected pigs and a co-housed, naïve animal, as well as the first report of the successful use of group oral fluids for the detection of RESTV RNA and virus-specific IgA antibodies.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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