Viruses (May 2024)

Isolation and Molecular Evidence of Tunisian Sheep-like Pestivirus (<i>Pestivirus N</i>) in Persistently Infected Sheep in Northern Italy, 2023

  • Enrica Sozzi,
  • Gabriele Leo,
  • Fatbardha Lamcja,
  • Massimiliano Lazzaro,
  • Cristian Salogni,
  • Davide Lelli,
  • Cristina Bertasio,
  • Giulia Magagna,
  • Ana Moreno,
  • Giovanni Loris Alborali,
  • Moira Bazzucchi,
  • Antonio Lavazza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v16060815
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. 815

Abstract

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Over the last few decades, several pestiviruses have been discovered in ruminants, pigs, and, more recently, in non-ungulate hosts. Consequently, the nomenclature and taxonomy of pestiviruses have been updated. The Tunisian sheep-like pestivirus (TSV, Pestivirus N) is an additional ovine pestivirus genetically closely related to classical swine fever virus (CSFV). In this study, during a survey of pestivirus infections in ovine farms in the Lombardy region of Northern Italy, we identified and isolated a pestivirus strain from a sheep that was found to belong to Pestivirus N species based on its genomic nucleotide identity. The sheep itself and its lamb were found to be persistently infected. We performed molecular characterization and phylogenetic analysis of three viral genomic regions (a fragment of 5′-UTR, partial Npro, and the whole E2 region). In conclusion, these results confirmed circulating TSV in Northern Italy after notification in Sicily, Italy, and France. Correlation with Italian, Tunisian, and French strains showed that detection might have resulted from the trading of live animals between countries, which supports the need for health control measures.

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