Porcine
reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS), a fast mutating virus that
affects pig herds and costs pork producers millions of pounds each year is being
targeted by scientists. A transatlantic research group is tackling PRRS, which
leads to reproductive failure in breeding stock and causes respiratory tract
illness in young pigs.
Also known as Blue-Ear Pig Disease, the condition can prove
fatal as it affects pigs’ immune systems and leaves them vulnerable to other
infections.
Researchers at The Roslin Insitute, at the University of
Edinburgh, are working with Iowa State University, which has received a $3
million grant, to find ways to tackle this devastating virus. They will study
whether some pigs have a genetic makeup that makes them less likely to become
sick following infections. This knowledge could help to ensure the breeding of
healthier pigs, which are less likely to succumb to PRRS.
The virus is especially virulent as it evolves rapidly. As a
result it now has many genetic variants. This causes challenges in vaccine
production, as an inoculation against one strain does not protect against
another strain of the virus. The research will include look at whether breeding
for a specific gene variant, which protects against PRSS, does not have knock-on
effects such as making the animal more vulnerable to another disease.
Although the exact economic impact of PRRSV has not yet been
quantified in Europe, the virus is estimated to cost the United States pig
industry around $600 million a year – almost a third of its losses related to
infectious diseases.
Professor Steve Bishop, of The Roslin Institute said: “The
constant mutation of the PRRS virus means that the efficacy of vaccines is
severely hindered. This collaborative research project will enable us to assess
the potential use of breeding to help reduce the impacts of this problematic
disease.”
The $3 million grant to look into PRRS was awarded by the US
Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, while
The Roslin Institute receives strategic funding from the Biotechnology and
Biological Sciences Research Council.
Professor Jack Dekkers, from Iowa State University, said: “This
grant is going to help us continue our work towards finding a way for the pork
industry to get a handle on a costly and difficult-to-control disease, and we’re
excited to move forward with our collaborators.”
Identifying gene variants that protect against infection can be
a tricky process, and researchers have to be certain that breeding for a
specific gene variant that makes pigs less susceptible to PRRS doesn’t have
unintended consequences, such as making the animal more vulnerable to another
disease.
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