4.6 Article

Evaluation of an ASFV RNA Helicase Gene A859L for Virus Replication and Swine Virulence

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VIRUSES-BASEL
卷 14, 期 1, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14010010

关键词

ASFV; ASF; African swine fever virus; A859L; helicase

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资金

  1. U.S. Department of Homeland Security [70RSAT19KPM000056]
  2. [DE-SC0014664]

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African swine fever virus (ASFV) is causing a devastating pandemic that has spread from central Europe to Asia since 2007. Recently, the first report of ASFV in the Americas in over 40 years was made in the Dominican Republic. Through studying the role of ASFV gene A859L, it was found that it is not essential for virus replication and infection.
African swine fever virus (ASFV) is producing a devastating pandemic that, since 2007, has spread to a contiguous geographical area from central Europe to Asia. In July 2021, ASFV was detected in the Dominican Republic, the first report of the disease in the Americas in more than 40 years. ASFV is a large, highly complex virus harboring a large dsDNA genome that encodes for more than 150 genes. The majority of these genes have not been functionally characterized. Bioinformatics analysis predicts that ASFV gene A859L encodes for an RNA helicase, although its function has not yet been experimentally assessed. Here, we evaluated the role of the A859L gene during virus replication in cell cultures and during infection in swine. For that purpose, a recombinant virus (ASFV-G- increment A859L) harboring a deletion of the A859L gene was developed using the highly virulent ASFV Georgia (ASFV-G) isolate as a template. Recombinant ASFV-G- increment A859L replicates in swine macrophage cultures as efficiently as the parental virus ASFV-G, demonstrating that the A859L gene is non-essential for ASFV replication. Experimental infection of domestic pigs demonstrated that ASFV-G- increment A859L replicates as efficiently and induces a clinical disease indistinguishable from that caused by the parental ASFV-G. These studies conclude that the predicted RNA helicase gene A859L is not involved in the processes of virus replication or disease production in swine.

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