Identification and assessment of virulence of a natural reassortant of infectious bursal disease virus

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Abstract

Infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) is one of the most important immunosuppressive viral agents in poultry production. Prophylactic vaccinations of chicken flocks are the primary tool for disease control. Widely used immunoprophylaxis can, however, provide high pressure which contributes to the genetic diversification of circulating viruses, e.g. through reassortment of genome segments. We report the genetic and phenotypic characterization of a field reassortant IBDV (designated as Bpop/03) that acquired segment A from very virulent IBDV and segment B from classical attenuated D78-like IBDV. Despite the mosaic genetic make-up, the virus caused high mortality (80%) in experimentally infected SPF chickens and induced lesions typical of the acute form of IBD. The in vivo study results are in contrast with the foregoing experimental investigations in which the natural reassortants exhibited an intermediate pathotype, and underline the complex nature of IBDV virulence.

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Pikuła, A., Lisowska, A., Jasik, A., & Śmietanka, K. (2018). Identification and assessment of virulence of a natural reassortant of infectious bursal disease virus. Veterinary Research, 49(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13567-018-0586-y

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