Swine influenza A virus infection dynamics and evolution in intensive pig production systems

Author:

Lagan Paula1ORCID,Hamil Michael2,Cull Susan3,Hanrahan Anthony4,Wregor Rosanna M2,Lemon Ken1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Veterinary Sciences Division, Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute , 12 Stoney Road, Belfast BT4 3SD, Northern Ireland

2. JMW Farms Ltd. , 50 Hamiltonsbawn Road, Armagh BT60 1HW, Northern Ireland

3. Craigavon Area Hospital , 68 Lurgan Road, Craigavon BT63 5QQ, Northern Ireland

4. School of Biological Sciences, Queen’s University Belfast , 19 Chlorine Gardens, Belfast BT9 5DL, Northern Ireland

Abstract

Abstract Swine influenza A virus (swIAV) is one of the main viral pathogens responsible for respiratory disease in farmed pigs. While outbreaks are often epidemic in nature, increasing reports suggest that continuous, endemic infection of herds is now common. The move towards larger herd sizes and increased intensification in the commercial pig industry may promote endemic infection; however, the impact that intensification has on swIAV infection dynamics and evolution is unclear. We carried out a longitudinal surveillance study for over 18 months on two enzootically infected, intensive, indoor, and multi-site pig production flows. Frequent sampling of all production stages using individual and group sampling methods was performed, followed by virological and immunological testing and whole-genome sequencing. We identified weaned pigs between 4 and 12-weeks old as the main reservoir of swIAV in the production flows, with continuous, year-round infection. Despite the continuous nature of viral circulation, infection levels were not uniform, with increasing exposure at the herd level associated with reduced viral prevalence followed by subsequent rebound infection. A single virus subtype was maintained on each farm for the entire duration of the study. Viral evolution was characterised by long periods of stasis punctuated by periods of rapid change coinciding with increasing exposure within the herd. An accumulation of mutations in the surface glycoproteins consistent with antigenic drift was observed, in addition to amino acid substitutions in the internal gene products as well as reassortment exchange of internal gene segments from newly introduced strains. These data demonstrate that long-term, continuous infection of herds with a single subtype is possible and document the evolutionary mechanisms utilised to achieve this.

Funder

Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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