Sequence Analysis of Egyptian Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus Field and Vaccine Strains: Intertypic Recombination and Evidence for Accidental Release of Virulent Virus.


Journal

Viruses
ISSN: 1999-4915
Titre abrégé: Viruses
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101509722

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
06 09 2020
Historique:
received: 11 08 2020
revised: 29 08 2020
accepted: 02 09 2020
entrez: 9 9 2020
pubmed: 10 9 2020
medline: 10 3 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

In spite of annual mass vaccination programs with polyvalent inactivated vaccines, the incidence and economic impact of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in Egypt is high. Viruses of the A, O and SAT 2 serotypes are endemic and repeated incursions of new lineages from other countries lead to an unstable situation that makes the selection of appropriate vaccine antigens very difficult. In this study, whole genome sequencing of a 2016 serotype A isolate from Egypt revealed a recombination event with an African serotype O virus. Based on available vaccine matching data, none of the vaccines currently used in Egypt are expected to sufficiently protect against this virus or other viruses of this lineage (A/AFRICA/G-IV) circulating there since 2012. In addition to the risk of vaccine failure caused by strain mismatch, the production of inactivated FMD vaccines is dangerous if adequate biosafety cannot be maintained. Using a high-throughput sequencing protocol optimized for short nucleic acid fragments, the composition of a local inactivated vaccine was analyzed in depth. The serotype O strain identified in the vaccine was genetically identical to viruses found in recent FMD outbreaks in Egypt.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32899903
pii: v12090990
doi: 10.3390/v12090990
pmc: PMC7552000
pii:
doi:

Substances chimiques

Viral Vaccines 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

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Auteurs

Sahar Abd El Rahman (S)

Department of Virology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura 35516, Egypt.

Bernd Hoffmann (B)

Institute of Diagnostic Virology, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, 17493 Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany.

Reham Karam (R)

Department of Virology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura 35516, Egypt.

Mohamed El-Beskawy (M)

Department of Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura 35516, Egypt.

Mohammed F Hamed (MF)

Department of Animal Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Matrouh University, Matrouh 51744, Egypt.

Leonie F Forth (LF)

Institute of Diagnostic Virology, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, 17493 Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany.

Dirk Höper (D)

Institute of Diagnostic Virology, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, 17493 Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany.

Michael Eschbaumer (M)

Institute of Diagnostic Virology, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, 17493 Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany.

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