PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

First report of border disease virus in Melophagus ovinus (sheep ked) collected in Xinjiang, China.

  • Yong-Hong Liu,
  • Bo He,
  • Kai-Rui Li,
  • Fei Li,
  • Lu-Yao Zhang,
  • Xian-Qiang Li,
  • Li Zhao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221435
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. e0221435

Abstract

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Melophagus ovinus (sheep ked) is a blood-sucking ectoparasite that is parasitic primarily on sheep. It is widely distributed in different geographical regions worldwide. In China, it has been mainly found in Xinjiang, Gansu, and Tibet in recent years. In addition to causing direct damage to the animal hosts, M. ovinus also carries pathogens and serves as a vector for disease transmission. Border disease virus (BDV) is a positive-sense, single-stranded RNA pestivirus that mainly infects and causes border disease (BD) in sheep and goats worldwide. Since 2012, this disease has been reported in 4 provinces in China. In the present study, we investigated the presence of BDV in M. ovinus from Xinjiang and Gansu. Frozen M. ovinus collected during 2017 and 2018 from Xinjiang and Gansu and preserved in our laboratory were studied. First, total RNA of M. ovinus was extracted, followed by reverse transcription, PCR (RT-PCR) amplification of the 5'-UTR of BDV, and sequencing of the amplified products. Finally, the sequencing results were analyzed using DNAStar, MEGA 5.0 molecular biology software, and the BLAST online platform. The results from RT-PCR and sequencing analyses showed that among the samples included in the study, only the M. ovinus collected from Qinghe County in Alta, Xinjiang in 2018 tested positive for BDV. BLAST analysis showed that the viral strain with the most similar nucleotide identity to the sequence of the China/BDV/2018 fragment was the goat-derived BDV strain AH12-02 collected in Anhui, China, in 2012. A phylogenetic-tree analysis showed the strain to exhibit a BDV-3 genotype. This is the first report globally on BDV detected in M. ovinus and is also the first report of BDV discovered in Xinjiang, China. This study reconfirms the presence of BDV in China.