After eight years of gathering data from more than 1,000 pigs infected with porcine circovirus 2, University of Nebraska–Lincoln (UNL) researchers have identified the gene associated with pigs’ susceptibility to the deadly swine disease.
In a press release, lead researcher Daniel Ciobanu, associate professor of animal science at UNL, said that genetic tests can now be developed to help the swine industry identify pigs more resistant to the virus. Early identification of pigs susceptible to the virus should improve the general health and welfare of swine populations worldwide, Ciobanu said. This discovery may also have broader implications across species and viral pathogens.
Despite being the smallest virus known to infect mammalian cells, porcine circovirus 2 is one of the most detrimental to the swine industry. The virus is found in all swine populations across the world, costing U.S. swine producers more than $250 million annually — mostly in the form of vaccines.
Though the virus is found on all swine farms, only a few pigs show signs of infection. Because no methods are available to differentiate susceptible from tolerant pigs, producers are forced to vaccinate all of their pigs. By blinding the immune system, the virus also makes swine susceptible to other pathogens, Ciobanu said.