4.7 Article

Experimental susceptibility of European sea bass and Senegalese sole to different betanodavirus isolates

Journal

VETERINARY MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 177, Issue 1-2, Pages 53-61

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2015.02.030

Keywords

Betanodavirus; Genotypes; Natural reassortant; Experimental infection; European sea bass; Senegalese sole

Funding

  1. Xunta de Galicia (Spain) [EM2012/005]
  2. INIA (Subprograma de Formacion de Personal Investigador en agroalimentacion en los centros de investigacion INIA-CCAA, Spanish Government)
  3. Novartis Animal Health Inc. (Canada)

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The susceptibility of juvenile European sea bass and Senegalese sole to three VNNV isolates (a reassortant RGNNV/SJNNV, as well as the parental RGNNV and SJNNV genotypes) has been evaluated by challenges using two inoculation ways (bath and intramuscular injection). The results demonstrate that these two fish species are susceptible to all the VNNV isolates tested. In European sea bass, RGNNV caused the highest cumulative mortality, reaching maximum values of viral RNA and titres. Although the SJNNV isolate did not provoke mortality or clinical signs of disease in this fish species, viral production in survivor fish was determined; on the other hand the reassortant isolate did cause mortality and clinical signs of disease, although less evident than those recorded after RGNNV infection. These results suggest that the changes suffered by the SJNNV RNA2 segment of the reassortant isolate, compared to the parental SJNNV, may have involved host-specificity and/or virulence determinants for European sea bass. Regarding Senegalese sole, although the three isolates caused 100% mortality, the reassortant strain provoked the most acute symptoms, and more quickly, especially in the bath challenge. This was also the isolate showing less difference between the number of RNA copies and viral titre, reaching the highest titres of infective viral particles in nervous tissue of infected animals. The RGNNV isolate produced the lowest values of infective viral particles. All these results suggest that the RGNNV and the reassortant isolates are the most suited for infecting European sea bass and Senegalese sole, respectively. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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