Cellular innate immunity against PRRSV and swine influenza viruses

Author

Crisci, Elisa

Fraile Sauce, Lorenzo José

Montoya, Maria

Publication date

2020-03-23T10:45:02Z

2020-03-23T10:45:02Z

2019-03-11



Abstract

Porcine respiratory disease complex (PRDC) is a polymicrobial syndrome that results from a combination of infectious agents, such as environmental stressors, population size, management strategies, age, and genetics. PRDC results in reduced performance as well as increased mortality rates and production costs in the pig industry worldwide. This review focuses on the interactions of two enveloped RNA viruses—porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) and swine influenza virus (SwIV)—as major etiological agents that contribute to PRDC within the porcine cellular innate immunity during infection. The innate immune system of the porcine lung includes alveolar and parenchymal/interstitial macrophages, neutrophils (PMN), conventional dendritic cells (DC) and plasmacytoid DC, natural killer cells, and γδ T cells, thus the in vitro and in vivo interactions between those cells and PRRSV and SwIV are reviewed. Likewise, the few studies regarding PRRSV-SwIV co-infection are illustrated together with the different modulation mechanisms that are induced by the two viruses. Alterations in responses by natural killer (NK), PMN, or γδ T cells have not received much attention within the scientific community as their counterpart antigen-presenting cells and there are numerous gaps in the knowledge regarding the role of those cells in both infections. This review will help in paving the way for future directions in PRRSV and SwIV research and enhancing the understanding of the innate mechanisms that are involved during infection with these viruses.


This research was funded by CSIC.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Pig; Innate immunity; PRRSV; Swine influenza virus

Publisher

MDPI

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci6010026

Veterinary Sciences, 2019, vol. 6, núm. 1, article number 26, p. 1-26

Rights

cc-by (c) Crisci, Elisa et al., 2019

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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