Journal of Immunology and Immunopathology
  • Year: 2020
  • Volume: 22
  • Issue: 2

Occurrence and VP2 gene-based Genotyping of Porcine Teschoviruses in India

  • Author:
  • Sudipta Bhat1, Shubhankar Sircar2, Mohd Ikram Ansari3, Pravaiz Sikander Dar1, O.R. Vinodhkumar4, Kuldeep Dhama5, Yashpal Singh Malik6
  • Total Page Count: 7
  • Published Online: Jul 3, 2021
  • Page Number: 152 to 158

1PhD Scholars

2Senior Research Fellow

3Research Associate

4Senior Scientist, Division of Epidemiology

5Principal Scientist, Division of Pathology, ICAR-Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Izatnagar-243122, Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh, India

6ICAR-National Fellow and Principal Scientist, Division of Biological Standardization, ICAR-Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Izatnagar-243122, Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh, India

*Corresponding author) email id: *malikyps@gmail.com

4vinodhkumar.rajendran@gmail.com

Abstract

Bhat S, Sircar S, Ansari MI, Dar PS, Vinodhkumar OR, Dhama K and Malik YS (2020). Occurrence and VP2 gene-based Genotyping of Porcine Teschoviruses in India. Journal of Immunology Immunopathology, 22(2): 152–158.

Porcine Teschovirus (PTVs), of the genus Teschovirus under the family Picornaviridae, are ubiquitously detected enteric viral pathogens in pigs and wild boars. PTVs have been responsible for causing the severe disease to asymptomatic infections in pigs. In the current study, sixty-seven faecal samples from the pigs of diverse age groups, sex, and health status were collected from three states of India viz., Uttar Pradesh (UP) (n = 27), Karnataka (n = 25), and Kerala (n = 17). The occurrence of PTV in pigs was 8.95% (6/67) with the highest in the state of Uttar Pradesh (3/27, 11.11%). Furthermore, nucleic acid-based sequence distance analysis revealed the circulation of genetically diverse PTV strains (66.8%-98.4%) in Indian pigs. Our study reports the circulation of PTV genotype 6 and 13 in the Indian pigs. The single Indian PTV 6 strain showed the closest relatedness to the German PTV strain (AF296117; 80.4%), whereas five PTV 13 strains were closer to the Hungarian strain (JQ429405; 74.1-78.9%). Future study will focus on VP1 genetic characterization and the evolutionary nature of Indian PTVs.

Keywords

Teschovirus, Picornaviridae, Phylogenetic analysis, Genotype, Genetic diversity