4.6 Article

Characterization of parainfluenza virus 5 from diarrheic piglet highlights its zoonotic potential

Journal

TRANSBOUNDARY AND EMERGING DISEASES
Volume 69, Issue 5, Pages E1510-E1525

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tbed.14482

Keywords

antibodies; characterization; cross-species transmission; iELISA; parainfluenza virus 5

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Programof China [2021YFF0703100]
  2. Key Research & Development Programof Heilongjiang province [GZ20210010]

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In this study, a strain of Parainfluenza virus 5 (PIV5) was successfully isolated from diarrheic piglets. The isolated PIV5 strain showed the ability to infect various host cell lines and haemagglutinate red blood cells from guinea pigs and chickens. An indirect ELISA method was developed to detect PIV5-specific antibodies, and the positive rate in porcine serum samples was found to be 75.7%. This is the first report characterizing a PIV5 strain isolated from a diarrheic piglet and providing insights into its zoonotic potential.
Parainfluenza virus 5 (PIV5), a member of paramyxoviruses, causes respiratory and neurological infection in several animal species. Whereas information on PIV5 infection in digestive system is very scarce. Here, we successfully isolated one PIV5 strain from diarrheic piglets. After four times plaque purification and ultracentrifugation, the paramyxovirus-like particles were observed by electron microscopy. The genome-wide phylogenetic analysis showed that the isolated strain was closely related to the PIV5 strain from a lesser panda and pigs in China. Therefore, we characterized this isolated PIV5 and found that this virus could haemagglutinate red blood cells from both guinea pigs and chickens. Further, we observed that this PIV5 could infect cell lines from various host species including pig, human, monkey, bovine, dog, cat, rabbit, hamster and mouse, which was confirmed with the immunofluorescent assay. To evaluate the distribution of PIV5 in the field, we developed an indirect ELISA (iELISA) for the first time to detect the specific antibodies based on recombinant nucleocapsid protein. A total of 530 porcine serum samples were tested and the PIV5-positive rate was 75.7%. To our knowledge, this is the first report describing the full characterization of PIV5 strain isolated from a diarrheic piglet. The ability of this PIV5 strain to infect a wide range of mammalian cell types indicates that PIV5 can transmit across different species, providing a remarkable insight into potential zoonosis. The virus strain and iELISA developed in this study can be used to investigate the pathogenesis, epidemiology, and zoonotic potential of PIV5.

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