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Shedding and transmission of bovine viral diarrhea virus by persistently infected calves

Persistently infected (PI) calves born to cows infected with non-cytopathic bovine virus diarrhea virus (BVDV) represent the main reservoir of the virus in nature. We herein report an investigation on the patterns of virus shedding and transmission by five PI calves produced experimentally through inoculation of pregnant cows with Brazilian BVDV isolates. Five calves that survived intrauterine infection were born healthy, lacking neutralizing antibodies to BVDV and harboring virus in the blood. After weaning - and following the disappearance of colostral antibodies - PI calves were monitored for virus in serum and body secretions (ocular, oral, nasal and genital) at weekly intervals for up to 150 days. For each animal, the virus titers in serum showed minor variations throughout the collections (with one exception that presented an increase late in infection), yet the titers varied widely among animals (from 10² to 10(6)TCID50/mL). Virus shedding in secretions was detected steadily during all the observation period with minor titer variations for each particular animal. The highest titers were generally detected in nasal and ocular secretions (titers 10(4) to 10(6)TCID50mL) whereas genital and oral secretions usually contained low amount of virus (10² to 10³TCID50mL). To evaluate the kinetics of virus transmission by these animals, one PI was introduced on a group of 10 seronegative calves maintained with a high animal density simulating the conditions of an intensive management. All 10 contact calves seroconverted to BVDV by day 30. Another PI calf was introduced into a 48-head herd kept under a low animal density, extensive grass management. Among these animals, 8/48 (16.6%) seroconverted by day 10, 26/48 (54.1%) by day 40 and 37/48 (77%) were seropositive at day 100, when the monitoring was discontinued. These results show that continuous viremia and virus shedding in high titers in secretions by PI animals assure an efficient and rapid virus transmission to contact animals, being the kinetics of transmission much faster under intensive conditions.

Bovine viral diarrhea virus; BVDV; persistent infection; transmission


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