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      Emergence of Porcine epidemic diarrhea virus in the United States: clinical signs, lesions, and viral genomic sequences.

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          Abstract

          During the 10 days commencing April 29, 2013, the Iowa State University Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory received the first 4 of many submissions from swine farms experiencing explosive epidemics of diarrhea and vomiting affecting all ages, with 90-95% mortality in suckling pigs. Histology revealed severe atrophy of villi in all segments of the small intestines with occasional villus-epithelial syncytial cells, but testing for rotaviruses and Transmissible gastroenteritis virus (Alphacoronavirus 1) were negative. Negative-staining electron microscopy of feces revealed coronavirus-like particles and a pan-coronavirus polymerase chain reaction (PCR) designed to amplify a conserved region of the polymerase gene for all members in the family Coronaviridae produced expected 251-bp amplicons. Subsequent sequencing and analysis revealed 99.6-100% identity among the PCR amplicons from the 4 farms and 97-99% identity to the corresponding portion of the polymerase gene of Porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV) strains, with the highest identity (99%) to strains from China in 2012. Findings were corroborated at National Veterinary Services Laboratories using 2 nested S-gene and 1 nested N-gene PCR tests where the sequenced amplicons also had the highest identity with 2012 China strains. Whole genome sequence for the virus from 2 farms in 2 different states using next-generation sequencing technique was compared to PEDV sequences available in GenBank. The 2013 U.S. PEDV had 96.6-99.5% identity with all known PEDV strains and the highest identity (>99.0%) to some of the 2011-2012 Chinese strains. The nearly simultaneous outbreaks of disease, and high degree of homology (99.6-100%) between the PEDV strains from the 4 unrelated farms, suggests a common source of virus.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Vet Diagn Invest
          Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc
          SAGE Publications
          1943-4936
          1040-6387
          Sep 2013
          : 25
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] 1Gregory W. Stevenson and Kyoungjin J. Yoon, Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, Iowa State University, 1600 South 16th Street, Ames, IA 50011. stevengw@iastate.edu; kyoon@iastate.edu.
          Article
          1040638713501675
          10.1177/1040638713501675
          23963154
          4d8bb387-2673-4ac2-b217-d66e5da1f0d8
          History

          Diarrhea,Porcine epidemic diarrhea virus,enteric disease,porcine

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