Recombinant LSDV Strains in Asia: Vaccine Spillover or Natural Emergence?

Viruses. 2022 Jun 29;14(7):1429. doi: 10.3390/v14071429.

Abstract

From 2017 to 2019, several vaccine-like recombinant strains of lumpy skin disease virus (LSDV) were discovered in Kazakhstan and neighbouring regions of Russia and China. Shortly before their emergence, the authorities in Kazakhstan launched a mass vaccination campaign with the Neethling-based Lumpivax vaccine. Since none of the other countries in the affected region had used a homologous LSDV vaccine, it was soon suspected that the Lumpivax vaccine was the cause of these unusual LSDV strains. In this study, we performed a genome-wide molecular analysis to investigate the composition of two Lumpivax vaccine batches and to establish a possible link between the vaccine and the recent outbreaks. Although labelled as a pure Neethling-based LSDV vaccine, the Lumpivax vaccine appears to be a complex mixture of multiple CaPVs. Using an iterative enrichment/assembly strategy, we obtained the complete genomes of a Neethling-like LSDV vaccine strain, a KSGP-like LSDV vaccine strain and a Sudan-like GTPV strain. The same analysis also revealed the presence of several recombinant LSDV strains that were (almost) identical to the recently described vaccine-like LSDV strains. Based on their InDel/SNP signatures, the vaccine-like recombinant strains can be divided into four groups. Each group has a distinct breakpoint pattern resulting from multiple recombination events, with the number of genetic exchanges ranging from 126 to 146. The enormous divergence of the recombinant strains suggests that they arose during seed production. The recent emergence of vaccine-like LSDV strains in large parts of Asia is, therefore, most likely the result of a spillover from animals vaccinated with the Lumpivax vaccine.

Keywords: homologous vaccine; live attenuated vaccine; lumpy skin disease virus; recombination; spillover.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Asia / epidemiology
  • Cattle
  • Lumpy Skin Disease*
  • Lumpy skin disease virus*
  • Vaccines, Attenuated
  • Viral Vaccines* / genetics

Substances

  • Vaccines, Attenuated
  • Viral Vaccines

Grants and funding

This study received funding from Sciensano and the EURL for Diseases Caused by Capripoxviruses.