4.6 Article

Infectious Salmon Anemia Virus Infectivity Is Determined by Multiple Segments with an Important Contribution from Segment 5

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14030631

Keywords

isavirus; salmonid; reverse genetic; infectivity

Categories

Funding

  1. FONDECYT-Conicyt Chile [1161006]
  2. DICYT-USACH Chile [021943CSM-POSTDOC]

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This study reveals the different roles of each gene segment in viral replication, infectivity, and cellular immune response in infectious salmon anemia virus (ISAV). Segments 5 and 6 play a critical role in the virulence and infectivity of the virus, while segment 2 can modulate the cellular immune response. The genetic compatibility between the genomic segments of HPR7b and HPR0 poses a latent risk of reassortment.
Infectious salmon anemia virus (ISAV) is the etiological agent of infectious salmon anemia. It belongs to the genus isavirus, one of the genera of the Orthomyxoviridae family, as does Influenzavirus A. The ISAV genome comprises eight negative-sense single-stranded RNA segments that code for at least 10 proteins. Although some ISAV strains can reach 100% mortality rates, the factors that determine isavirus infectivity remain unknown. However, some studies suggest that segments 5 and 6 are responsible for the different degrees of virulence and infectivity among ISAV subtypes, unlike the influenza A virus, where most segments are involved in the virus infectivity. In this work, synthetic reassortant viruses for the eight segments of ISAV were generated by reverse genetics, combining a highly virulent virus, ISAV 752_09 (HPR7b), and an avirulent strain, SK779/06 (HPR0). We characterized the rescued viruses and their capacity to replicate and infect different cell lines, produce plaques in ASK cells, and their ability to induce and modulate the cellular immune response in vitro. Our results show that the majority of ISAV segments are involved in at least one of the analyzed characteristics, segment 5 being one of the most important, allowing HPR0 viruses, among other things, to produce plaques and replicate in CHSE-214 cells. We determined that segments 5 and 6 participate in different stages of the viral cycle, and their compatibility is critical for viral infection. Additionally, we demonstrated that segment 2 can modulate the cellular immune response. Our results indicate a high degree of genetic compatibility between the genomic segments of HPR7b and HPR0, representing a latent risk of reassortant that would give rise to a new virus with an unknown phenotype.

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