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Scientific Reports

Publication date: 2018-06-29
Publisher: Nature Portfolio

Author:

Theuns, Sebastiaan
Vanmechelen, Bert ; Bernaert, Quinten ; Deboutte, Ward ; Vandenhole, Marilou ; Beller, Leen ; Matthijnssens, Jelle ; Maes, Piet ; Nauwynck, Hans J

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Multidisciplinary Sciences, Science & Technology - Other Topics, GROUP-A ROTAVIRUSES, PIG GROUP-A, FECAL VIROME, MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION, ASYMPTOMATIC PIGS, GENETIC DIVERSITY, REAL-TIME, INFECTION, DIARRHEA, SWINE, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Belgium, Diarrhea, Feces, Follow-Up Studies, Kobuvirus, Longitudinal Studies, Nanopores, Phylogeny, Picornaviridae Infections, RNA, Viral, Retrospective Studies, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Swine, Swine Diseases

Abstract:

Enteric diseases in swine are often caused by different pathogens and thus metagenomics are a useful tool for diagnostics. The capacities of nanopore sequencing for viral diagnostics were investigated here. First, cell culture-grown porcine epidemic diarrhea virus and rotavirus A were pooled and sequenced on a MinION. Reads were already detected at 7 seconds after start of sequencing, resulting in high sequencing depths (19.2 to 103.5X) after 3 h. Next, diarrheic feces of a one-week-old piglet was analyzed. Almost all reads (99%) belonged to bacteriophages, which may have reshaped the piglet's microbiome. Contigs matched Bacteroides, Escherichia and Enterococcus phages. Moreover, porcine kobuvirus was discovered in the feces for the first time in Belgium. Suckling piglets shed kobuvirus from one week of age, but an association between peak of viral shedding (106.42-107.01 copies/swab) and diarrheic signs was not observed during a follow-up study. Retrospective analysis showed the widespread (n = 25, 56.8% positive) of genetically moderately related kobuviruses among Belgian diarrheic piglets. MinION enables rapid detection of enteric viruses. Such new methodologies will change diagnostics, but more extensive validations should be conducted. The true enteric pathogenicity of porcine kobuvirus should be questioned, while its subclinical importance cannot be excluded.