University of Minnesota team receives $3 million grant to study PRRS
The project aims to help farmers understand how PRRSV evolves, changes, moves and persists. It also helps producers explore ways of out-maneuvering PRRSV.
September 9, 2019
University of Minnesota College of Veterinary Medicine researchers and collaborators at the University of Edinburgh’s Roslin Institute have received nearly $3 million in grant money to investigate how porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus evolves and spreads. The research will help scientists and producers anticipate a herd’s susceptibility to different strains of PRRSV, and customize mitigation efforts accordingly. The data generated could be used to inform future vaccine designs.
The grant is funded jointly by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, and the United Kingdom Government’s Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, and will cover the next four years of research.
Kim VanderWaal, assistant professor in the Department of Veterinary Population Medicine at the CVM, is the principal investigator on the project. “Studying PRRSV’s evolution will help us better understand and hopefully control PRRSV, but it will also help us understand the evolution and drivers of genetic diversity in viruses in humans and other animals,” VanderWaal says.
PRRSV costs the U.S. swine industry more than $560 million each year. First found in herds in Indiana, North Carolina, Iowa and Minnesota in the late 1980s, the virus rapidly spreads within barns and between farms. It has since remained one of the industry’s biggest game changers. Since its emergence in the United States, scientists have worked to reduce its impact.
While a host may build immunity to a certain strain of PRRSV after infection, that strain — as with any RNA virus — can counter-evolve to survive in that host and spread. As viruses often compete for hosts—some are better than others at evading the host’s immunity, depending on what that host is used to. This process is called “multistrain dynamics,” and has been investigated extensively in human medicine, but has rarely been explored in animals — until now. This project aims to help farmers understand how PRRSV evolves, changes, moves and persists. It also helps producers explore ways of out-maneuvering PRRSV.
As with many RNA viruses, PRRSV rapidly evolves and acquires genetic changes over time. However, scientists can study and potentially predict the genetic diversity of PRRSV in pigs better than they can study other viruses in humans or wildlife because of the rich availability of data — they know where farms are, so they know what the distribution of hosts looks like. They also know how animals are moving between farms, and there is already a lot of ongoing sequencing, so scientists know where and when strains of the virus occur. Researchers don’t have this information readily available for studying the same questions in a human virus.
The project is partially built on data collected by the Morrison Swine Health Monitoring Project at the University of Minnesota, which tracks the occurrence of PRRSV in roughly 50% of the United States’ breeding swine population. MSHMP is coordinated by Cesar Corzo, associate professor in the VPM, who is also on the research team for this grant. “One of the reasons Minnesota is so ideally situated for this research is that this dataset is one-of-a-kind,” says VanderWaal.
Another specific asset to this team’s approach is the contributions of Declan Schroeder, virologist and associate professor in the VPM. Schroeder’s lab was able to develop a new technique that can describe the full genomic strain profile of PRRSV within 24 hours of sampling. Schroeder says this research can give veterinarians a better tool to rapidly diagnose the infection in animals.
This work is also extremely timely. Another part of this project aims to track the spread of different strains of PRRSV, including newly evolved ones. “An emergence of a new strain was last seen in 2014,” says VanderWaal. “and we see a general pattern where a significant new type or strain appears every three to five years.”
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