Occurrence in sick animals and genetic heterogeneity of Siberian isolates of bovine respiratory syncytial virus (Pneumoviridae: Orthopneumovirus; BRSV) identified in the territories of the Ural, Siberian Federal District and the Republic of Kazakhstan

Autor: Alexander G. Glotov, Anton G. Yuzhakov, Tatyana I. Glotova, Alexey V. Nefedchenko, Svetlana V. Koteneva, Alina K. Komina, Elena V. Zhukova
Jazyk: English<br />Russian
Rok vydání: 2024
Předmět:
Zdroj: Вопросы вирусологии, Vol 69, Iss 1, Pp 76-87 (2024)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 0507-4088
2411-2097
DOI: 10.36233/0507-4088-216
Popis: Introduction. Bovine respiratory syncytial virus (Pneumoviridae: Orthornavirae, Orthopneumovirus; Bovine orthopneumovirus, Bovine respiratory syncytial virus, BRSV) is one of causative agents of respiratory diseases in animals. The study of the occurrence and genetic diversity of this pathogen is of particular importance. Objective. To study the frequency of virus in animals using RT-PCR and genetic heterogeneity of isolates based on determining the complete nucleotide sequence of glycoprotein G gene. Materials and methods. A 381-bp region of glycoprotein F gene was used for identification of virus genome, while complete nucleotide sequences of G gene were used for phylogenetic analysis. Phylogenetic trees were constructed using the maximum likelihood method in MEGA 7.0 software. Results. During outbreaks of respiratory diseases, BRSV RNA was detected in animals of all ages in samples of lungs, nasal secretions, pulmonary lymph nodes. Complete nucleotide sequences of glycoprotein G gene, 771 bp in length were obtained for five isolates and 789 bp in length ‒ for two isolates. Nucleotide similarity between them was 87–100%. Phylogenetic analysis assigned the isolates to subgroups II and III, each of which included two isolates. A separate clade formed by K18 isolate from animals imported from Canada and sequences from vaccines containing the attenuated «375» strain. Conclusion. The virus genome was identified in cows and heifers (20.0 and 14.3%), in calves up 1 month of age (3.05%), and in calves from 1 to 6 months of age (6.7%). Complete G gene nucleotide sequence analysis is a useful tool for studying the molecular epidemiology of BRSV on particular territories.
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