4.7 Article

Diversity of Avian leukosis virus subgroup J in local chickens, Jiangxi, China

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-84189-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Program of Fujian Provincial Key Laboratory for Avian Diseases Control and Prevention [KF201901]
  2. earmarked fund for Jiangxi Agriculture Research System [JXARS-09]

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This study conducted a systematic epidemiological survey in local chicken flocks in Jiangxi Province, China and isolated 71 strains from 560 samples, with different molecular features belonging to subgroup J, suggesting that local chickens may have long been reservoirs for various ALV-J strains. The research also revealed the emergence of novel strains forming separate evolutionary branches, indicating the breeding of new mutated ALVs in local chickens.
Avian leukosis caused by avian leukosis virus (ALV) is one of the most severe diseases endangering the poultry industry. When the eradication measures performed in commercial broilers and layers have achieved excellent results, ALV in some local chickens has gradually attracted attention. Since late 2018, following the re-outbreak of ALV-J in white feather broilers in China, AL-like symptoms also suddenly broke out in some local flocks, leading to great economic losses. In this study, a systematic epidemiological survey was carried out in eight local chicken flocks in Jiangxi Province, China, and 71 strains were finally isolated from 560 samples, with the env sequences of them being successfully sequenced. All of those new isolates belong to subgroup J but they have different molecular features and were very different from the strains that emerged in white feature broilers recently, with some strains being highly consistent with those previously isolated from commercial broilers, layers and other flocks or even isolated from USA and Russian, suggesting these local chickens have been acted as reservoirs to accumulate various ALV-J strains for a long time. More seriously, phylogenetic analysis shows that there were also many novel strains emerging and in a separate evolutionary branch, indicating several new mutated ALVs are being bred in local chickens. Besides, ALV-J strains isolated in this study can be further divided into ten groups, while there were more or fewer groups in different chickens, revealing that ALV may cross propagate in those flocks. The above analyses explain the complex background and future evolution trend of ALV-J in Chinese local chickens, providing theoretical support for the establishment of corresponding prevention and control measures.

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