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Simultaneous co-infection with swine influenza A and porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome viruses potentiates adaptive immune responses
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Metadata
Document Title
Simultaneous co-infection with swine influenza A and porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome viruses potentiates adaptive immune responses
Author
Chrun T., Maze E.A., Roper K.J., Vatzia E., Paudyal B., McNee A., Martini V., Manjegowda T., Freimanis G., Silesian A., Polo N., Clark B., Besell E., Booth G., Carr B.V., Edmans M., Nunez A., Koonpaew S., Wanasen N., Graham S.P., Tchilian E.
Affiliations
The Pirbright Institute, Woking, United Kingdom; Pathology and Animal Sciences, Animal and Plant Health Agency, Addlestone, United Kingdom; Virology and Cell Technology Laboratory, National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC), National Science and Technology Development Agency, Pathumthani, Thailand
Type
Article
Source Title
Frontiers in Immunology
ISSN
16643224
Year
2023
Volume
14
Open Access
All Open Access, Gold, Green
Publisher
Frontiers Media S.A.
DOI
10.3389/fimmu.2023.1192604
Format
Abstract
Porcine respiratory disease is multifactorial and most commonly involves pathogen co-infections. Major contributors include swine influenza A (swIAV) and porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRSV) viruses. Experimental co-infection studies with these two viruses have shown that clinical outcomes can be exacerbated, but how innate and adaptive immune responses contribute to pathogenesis and pathogen control has not been thoroughly evaluated. We investigated immune responses following experimental simultaneous co-infection of pigs with swIAV H3N2 and PRRSV-2. Our results indicated that clinical disease was not significantly exacerbated, and swIAV H3N2 viral load was reduced in the lung of the co-infected animals. PRRSV-2/swIAV H3N2 co-infection did not impair the development of virus-specific adaptive immune responses. swIAV H3N2-specific IgG serum titers and PRRSV-2-specific CD8?+ T-cell responses in blood were enhanced. Higher proportions of polyfunctional CD8?+ T-cell subset in both blood and lung washes were found in PRRSV-2/swIAV H3N2 co-infected animals compared to the single-infected groups. Our findings provide evidence that systemic and local host immune responses are not negatively affected by simultaneous swIAV H3N2/PRRSV-2 co-infection, raising questions as to the mechanisms involved in disease modulation. Copyright ? 2023 Chrun, Maze, Roper, Vatzia, Paudyal, McNee, Martini, Manjegowda, Freimanis, Silesian, Polo, Clark, Besell, Booth, Carr, Edmans, Nunez, Koonpaew, Wanasen, Graham and Tchilian.
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
License
CC BY
Rights
Authors
Publication Source
WOS