Makau Dennis N, Alkhamis Moh A, Paploski Igor A D, Corzo Cesar A, Lycett Samantha, VanderWaal Kimberly
Department of Veterinary Population Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 1365 Gortner Avenue, St. Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Public Health, Health Sciences Center, Kuwait University, Kuwait City, 24923, Safat 13110, Kuwait.
Virus Evol. 2021 Jul 15;7(2):veab060. doi: 10.1093/ve/veab060. eCollection 2021.
Viral sequence data coupled with phylodynamic models have become instrumental in investigating the outbreaks of human and animal diseases, and the incorporation of the hypothesized drivers of pathogen spread can enhance the interpretation from phylodynamic inference. Integrating animal movement data with phylodynamics allows us to quantify the extent to which the spatial diffusion of a pathogen is influenced by animal movements and contrast the relative importance of different types of movements in shaping pathogen distribution. We combine animal movement, spatial, and environmental data in a Bayesian phylodynamic framework to explain the spatial diffusion and evolutionary trends of a rapidly spreading sub-lineage (denoted L1A) of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) Type 2 from 2014 to 2017. PRRSV is the most important endemic pathogen affecting pigs in the USA, and this particular virulent sub-lineage emerged in 2014 and continues to be the dominant lineage in the US swine industry to date. Data included 984 open reading frame 5 (ORF5) PRRSV L1A sequences obtained from two production systems in a swine-dense production region (∼85,000 mi) in the USA between 2014 and 2017. The study area was divided into sectors for which model covariates were summarized, and animal movement data between each sector were summarized by age class (wean: 3-4 weeks; feeder: 8-25 weeks; breeding: ≥21 weeks). We implemented a discrete-space phylogeographic generalized linear model using Bayesian evolutionary analysis by sampling trees (BEAST) to infer factors associated with variability in between-sector diffusion rates of PRRSV L1A. We found that between-sector spread was enhanced by the movement of feeder pigs, spatial adjacency of sectors, and farm density in the destination sector. The PRRSV L1A strain was introduced in the study area in early 2013, and genetic diversity and effective population size peaked in 2015 before fluctuating seasonally (peaking during the summer months). Our study underscores the importance of animal movements and shows, for the first time, that the movement of feeder pigs (8-25 weeks old) shaped the spatial patterns of PRRSV spread much more strongly than the movements of other age classes of pigs. The inclusion of movement data into phylodynamic models as done in this analysis may enhance our ability to identify crucial pathways of disease spread that can be targeted to mitigate the spatial spread of infectious human and animal pathogens.
病毒序列数据与系统动力学模型相结合,已成为调查人类和动物疾病爆发的重要工具,纳入病原体传播的假设驱动因素可以增强系统动力学推断的解释力。将动物移动数据与系统动力学相结合,使我们能够量化病原体的空间扩散受动物移动影响的程度,并对比不同类型移动在塑造病原体分布中的相对重要性。我们在贝叶斯系统动力学框架中结合动物移动、空间和环境数据,以解释2014年至2017年期间猪繁殖与呼吸综合征病毒2型(PRRSV)一个快速传播的亚谱系(称为L1A)的空间扩散和进化趋势。PRRSV是影响美国猪群的最重要的地方性病原体,这个特别的强毒株系于2014年出现,至今仍是美国养猪业的主导谱系。数据包括2014年至2017年期间从美国一个猪密集养殖区(约85,000平方英里)的两个生产系统中获得的984个开放阅读框5(ORF5)PRRSV L1A序列。研究区域被划分为若干扇区,对模型协变量进行了汇总,每个扇区之间的动物移动数据按年龄组进行了汇总(断奶仔猪:3 - 4周;育肥猪:8 - 25周;繁殖猪:≥21周)。我们使用通过抽样树进行贝叶斯进化分析(BEAST)实现了一个离散空间系统地理学广义线性模型,以推断与PRRSV L1A扇区间扩散率变异性相关的因素。我们发现,育肥猪的移动、扇区的空间邻接性以及目标扇区的猪场密度促进了扇区间的传播。PRRSV L1A毒株于2013年初引入研究区域,遗传多样性和有效种群数量在2015年达到峰值,随后随季节波动(在夏季达到峰值)。我们的研究强调了动物移动的重要性,并首次表明,8 - 25周龄育肥猪的移动比其他年龄组猪的移动更强烈地塑造了PRRSV传播的空间模式。如本分析中那样将移动数据纳入系统动力学模型,可能会增强我们识别疾病传播关键途径的能力,这些途径可作为目标来减轻人类和动物传染性病原体的空间传播。