Singleton reactors in the diagnosis of swine vesicular disease: the role of coxsackievirus B5

Citation
P. Moonen et al., Singleton reactors in the diagnosis of swine vesicular disease: the role of coxsackievirus B5, VET MICROB, 76(3), 2000, pp. 291-297
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Veterinary Medicine/Animal Health",Microbiology
Journal title
VETERINARY MICROBIOLOGY
ISSN journal
03781135 → ACNP
Volume
76
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
291 - 297
Database
ISI
SICI code
0378-1135(20001001)76:3<291:SRITDO>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
Swine vesicular disease virus (SVDV) and Coxsackie BS virus (CVB5) are clos ely related viruses that can infect swine and man and give rise to cross-re acting serum antibodies. It is, therefore, possible that SVD antibodies fou nd in serologic screenings of pigs are induced by CVB5. Single positive ani mals found in screening programmes are generally referred to as singleton r eactors (SR). To determine whether SR in SVDV screenings are induced by CVB 5 infection, Virus neutralisation tests (VNTs) and radioimmunoprecipitation assays (RIPA) were carried out on sera of SR, sera of pigs experimentally infected with SVDV, and sera from pigs vaccinated with CVB5 isolates. The SR sera reacted repeatedly positive in the SVDV UKG/27/72 VNT, but reac ted differently in three other VNTs (SVDV NET/1/92, CVB5A, and CVB5B). The VNT titres obtained with the SR sera revealed a correlation between both SV DV strains, and also between both CVB5 stains, but no correlation was found between SVD and CVB5 VNT titres. Sera of experimentally infected (SVDV) or vaccinated (CVB5) pigs showed titres in all four neutralisation tests. In the RTPA, the reaction patterns of the SR sera Varied considerably with all four antigens used, in contrast to sera from pigs experimentally infect ed with SVDV that reacted with all antigens used, and sera from pigs vaccin ated with CVB5 that reacted only with CVB5 antigens. The results presented in this paper show that neither CVB5 nor SVDV infections are the only cause of the SR phenomenon. Testing for CVB5 specific antibodies can reduce the number of SR sera in the serodiagnosis of SVDV. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B .V. All rights reserved.