The porcine circovirus type 3 (PCV3) becomes an important causative agent of swine disease since its discovery in 2016. PCV3 infection exhibits a wide range of clinical syndromes causing substantial economic losses in swine industry. Previous studies have reported the detection of numerous known viruses including circovirus in mosquitoes. However, the transmission of PCV3 in field-caught mosquitoes remains largely unknown. This study aims to detect PCV3 infection in mosquitoes and analyze its genomic characteristics. Here, we performed a PCR to detect the PCV3 in 269 mosquito samples collected from pig farms located in Heilongjiang, Jilin, and Yunnan provinces. The proportion of PCV3-positive mosquitoes was 32.0 % (86/269), ranging from 21.4%-42.5% at farm level, which may imply that mosquito serves as a route of transmission for PCV3. To determine the possible origin of PCV3 in mosquitoes, 80 pig serum samples were collected from the pig farms where mosquito sampling was also performed. The proportion of PCV3-positive farms ranged from 15.0%-30.0 % in which infection of positive pigs positively correlated with mosquitoes carrying the virus. Additionally, we sequenced the entire genome of 6 strains of PCV3 in mosquitoes and 2 strains of PCV3 in pigs. Sequence analysis indicated a 100 % nucleotide similarity between mosquito and pig viral isolates that were all collected from similar farms. Phylogenetic analysis showed that PCV3 could be divided into two clades, PCV3a and PCV3b, and the PCV3 strains isolated in mosquitoes were distributed on the two clades. Our results demonstrate that mosquitoes may serve as a potential transmission vector in the life-cycle of PCV3, revealing possible transmission routes of PCV3.
Keywords: Complete genome; Mosquitoes; PCV3; Pig farms; Transmission vectors.
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