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Detection and Phylogenetic Analysis of the Hepatitis E Virus in a Canadian Swine Production Network
Authors:Nicolas Nantel-Fortier  Ann Letellier  Virginie Lachapelle  Philippe Fravalo  Yvan L’Homme  Julie Brassard
Affiliation:1.NSERC Industrial Research Chair in Meat Safety, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine,University of Montréal,Saint-Hyacinthe,Canada;2.Saint-Hyacinthe Research and Development Center, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada,Saint-Hyacinthe,Canada
Abstract:Viral contamination along the production chain is a significant concern in both food safety and livestock health. Pigs have been reported to act as a reservoir for zoonotic viruses, sometimes emerging ones, and epidemiological studies have shown direct links between the consumption of uncooked pork offal and cases of hepatitis caused by the hepatitis E virus (HEV) genotype 3 in humans. The presence of HEV in swine herds has been reported, but its dissemination in pork production environments is still unknown. To investigate viral contamination sources in the swine industry, 452 environment and fecal samples, including samples from livestock transportation vehicles, were collected over a period of 11 months from ten farms and one slaughterhouse that together represent a single production network. Hepatitis E virus RNA was detected by nested RT-PCR in 32 samples from both inside and outside farm buildings, on trucks, and, mostly, from fomites collected in the slaughterhouse yard, such as on a utility vehicle. Phylogenetic analysis showed a wide diversity of HEV genotype 3 strains, similar to human and swine strains previously found. According to the results of this study, the movements of trucks and utility vehicles might play an important role in HEV dissemination on a slaughterhouse site and throughout an entire network.
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