4.6 Article

Polymerase Fidelity Contributes to Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus Pathogenicity and Transmissibility In Vivo

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 95, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01569-20

Keywords

foot-and-mouth disease virus; RdRp; attenuation; polymerase fidelity; transmissibility

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFD0501101, 2016YFD0501505]
  2. Open Project of State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment from Harbin Institute of Technology [HC202023]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31770173]

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This study demonstrates the importance of FMDV genetic diversity in viral virulence and transmissibility in susceptible animals. The generation of a high-fidelity FMDV variant with a single amino acid substitution in polymerase highlights the impact of viral population diversity on interhost viral spread. Furthermore, the high genetic diversity of type O FMDV may contribute to its dominance in the global epidemic by increasing both virulence and transmissibility.
The low fidelity of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) RNA-dependent RNA polymerase allows FMDV to exhibit high genetic diversity. Previously, we showed that the genetic diversity of FMDV plays an important role in virulence in suckling mice. Here, we mutated the amino acid residue Phe257, located in the finger domain of FMDV polymerase and conserved across FMDV serotypes, to a cysteine (F257C) to study the relationship between viral genetic diversity, virulence, and transmissibility in natural hosts. The single amino acid substitution in FMDV polymerase resulted in a high-fidelity virus variant, rF257C, with growth kinetics indistinguishable from those of wild-type (WT) virus in cell culture, but it displayed smaller plaques and impaired fitness in direct competition assays. Furthermore, we found that rF257C was attenuated in vivo in both suckling mice and pigs (one of its natural hosts). Importantly, contact exposure experiments showed that the rF257C virus exhibited reduced transmissibility compared to that of wild-type FMDV in the porcine model. This study provides evidence that FMDV genetic diversity is important for viral virulence and transmissibility in susceptible animals. Given that type O FMDV exhibits the highest genetic diversity among all seven serotypes of FMDV, we propose that the lower polymerase fidelity of the type O FMDV could contribute to its dominance worldwide. IMPORTANCE Among the seven serotypes of FMDV, serotype O FMDV have the broadest distribution worldwide, which could be due to their high virulence and transmissibility induced by high genetic diversity. In this paper, we generated a single amino acid substitution FMDV variant with a high-fidelity polymerase associated with viral fitness, virulence, and transmissibility in a natural host. The results highlight that maintenance of viral population diversity is essential for interhost viral spread. This study provides evidence that higher genetic diversity of type O FMDV could increase both virulence and transmissibility, thus leading to their dominance in the global epidemic.

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