Environmental Factors and Their Threshold Affecting the Survival of Five Aquatic Animal Viruses in Different Animal Cells

Aquatic animal viruses infect and transmit in aquatic environments, causing serious harm to the aquaculture industry and a variety of wild aquatic animals. How are they affected by environmental factors and do they represent potential threat to mammalian heath or not? Here, the effects of environmen...

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Published in:Viruses
Main Authors: Zi-Hao Wang, Fei Ke, Jian-Fang Gui, Qi-Ya Zhang
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Subjects:
UV
pH
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/v14112546
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/1999-4915/14/11/2546/ 2023-08-20T04:09:40+02:00 Environmental Factors and Their Threshold Affecting the Survival of Five Aquatic Animal Viruses in Different Animal Cells Zi-Hao Wang Fei Ke Jian-Fang Gui Qi-Ya Zhang agris 2022-11-17 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/v14112546 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Animal Viruses https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14112546 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Viruses; Volume 14; Issue 11; Pages: 2546 aquatic animal viruses environmental factors UV temperature pH drying titers mammalian cell Text 2022 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/v14112546 2023-08-01T07:23:37Z Aquatic animal viruses infect and transmit in aquatic environments, causing serious harm to the aquaculture industry and a variety of wild aquatic animals. How are they affected by environmental factors and do they represent potential threat to mammalian heath or not? Here, the effects of environmental factors (ultraviolet radiation (UV), temperature, pH, and drying) and their threshold on five epidemic aquatic animal viruses infecting amphibians and bony fish, including Rana grylio virus (RGV), Andrias davidianus ranavirus (ADRV), Grass carp reovirus (GCRV), Paralichthys olivaceus rhabdovirus (PORV), and Scophthalmus maximus rhabdovirus (SMRV), were measured and compared in a fish cell line. The examination of virus titers after different treatment in fish cells showed that the two iridoviruses, RGV and ADRV, had a higher tolerance to all of the environmental factors, such as they only had a decay rate of 22–36% when incubated at 37 °C for 7 days. However, the rhabdovirus SMRV was sensitive to all of the factors, with a decay rate of more than 80% in most of the treatments; even a complete inactivation (100%) can be observed after drying treatment. To address the potential threat to mammals, infectivity and limitation factors of the five viruses in Baby hamster kidney fibroblast cells (BHK-21) were tested, which showed that three of the five viruses can replicate at a low temperature, but a high temperature strongly inhibited their infection and none of them could replicate at 37 °C. This study clarified the sensitivity or tolerance of several different types of aquatic animal viruses to the main environmental factors in the aquatic environment and proved that the viruses cannot replicate in mammalian cells at normal physiological temperature. Text Scophthalmus maximus MDPI Open Access Publishing Viruses 14 11 2546
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic aquatic animal viruses
environmental factors
UV
temperature
pH
drying
titers
mammalian cell
spellingShingle aquatic animal viruses
environmental factors
UV
temperature
pH
drying
titers
mammalian cell
Zi-Hao Wang
Fei Ke
Jian-Fang Gui
Qi-Ya Zhang
Environmental Factors and Their Threshold Affecting the Survival of Five Aquatic Animal Viruses in Different Animal Cells
topic_facet aquatic animal viruses
environmental factors
UV
temperature
pH
drying
titers
mammalian cell
description Aquatic animal viruses infect and transmit in aquatic environments, causing serious harm to the aquaculture industry and a variety of wild aquatic animals. How are they affected by environmental factors and do they represent potential threat to mammalian heath or not? Here, the effects of environmental factors (ultraviolet radiation (UV), temperature, pH, and drying) and their threshold on five epidemic aquatic animal viruses infecting amphibians and bony fish, including Rana grylio virus (RGV), Andrias davidianus ranavirus (ADRV), Grass carp reovirus (GCRV), Paralichthys olivaceus rhabdovirus (PORV), and Scophthalmus maximus rhabdovirus (SMRV), were measured and compared in a fish cell line. The examination of virus titers after different treatment in fish cells showed that the two iridoviruses, RGV and ADRV, had a higher tolerance to all of the environmental factors, such as they only had a decay rate of 22–36% when incubated at 37 °C for 7 days. However, the rhabdovirus SMRV was sensitive to all of the factors, with a decay rate of more than 80% in most of the treatments; even a complete inactivation (100%) can be observed after drying treatment. To address the potential threat to mammals, infectivity and limitation factors of the five viruses in Baby hamster kidney fibroblast cells (BHK-21) were tested, which showed that three of the five viruses can replicate at a low temperature, but a high temperature strongly inhibited their infection and none of them could replicate at 37 °C. This study clarified the sensitivity or tolerance of several different types of aquatic animal viruses to the main environmental factors in the aquatic environment and proved that the viruses cannot replicate in mammalian cells at normal physiological temperature.
format Text
author Zi-Hao Wang
Fei Ke
Jian-Fang Gui
Qi-Ya Zhang
author_facet Zi-Hao Wang
Fei Ke
Jian-Fang Gui
Qi-Ya Zhang
author_sort Zi-Hao Wang
title Environmental Factors and Their Threshold Affecting the Survival of Five Aquatic Animal Viruses in Different Animal Cells
title_short Environmental Factors and Their Threshold Affecting the Survival of Five Aquatic Animal Viruses in Different Animal Cells
title_full Environmental Factors and Their Threshold Affecting the Survival of Five Aquatic Animal Viruses in Different Animal Cells
title_fullStr Environmental Factors and Their Threshold Affecting the Survival of Five Aquatic Animal Viruses in Different Animal Cells
title_full_unstemmed Environmental Factors and Their Threshold Affecting the Survival of Five Aquatic Animal Viruses in Different Animal Cells
title_sort environmental factors and their threshold affecting the survival of five aquatic animal viruses in different animal cells
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3390/v14112546
op_coverage agris
genre Scophthalmus maximus
genre_facet Scophthalmus maximus
op_source Viruses; Volume 14; Issue 11; Pages: 2546
op_relation Animal Viruses
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14112546
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/v14112546
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