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Interactions Between M. hyopneumoniae and Other Pathogens

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Presentation on theme: "Interactions Between M. hyopneumoniae and Other Pathogens"— Presentation transcript:

1 Interactions Between M. hyopneumoniae and Other Pathogens
Eileen L. Thacker DVM, PhD, DACVM Iowa State University

2 Porcine Respiratory Disease Complex (PRDC)
Economically significant to the swine industry in the U.S.

3 Pathogens Associated with PRDC
PRRSV Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae Swine influenza virus (SIV) Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae Streptococcus suis Pasteurella multocida Aujeszky’s disease (Pseudorabies virus )

4 Enzootic pneumonia Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae M. hyopneumoniae plus
Mycoplasmal pneumonia M. hyopneumoniae plus Pasteurella multocida Bordetella bronchiseptica Haemophilus parasuis Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae Etc.

5 M. hyopneumoniae & P. multocida (Enzootic Pneumonia)

6 PRDC Enzootic pneumonia + PRRSV SIV PCV 2?

7 Which Diseases are Considered the Biggest Problem in PRDC?
Varies from farm-to-farm Porcine respiratory disease complex common problem in finishing pigs NOT in the scope of this talk to discuss all pathogens results of current research

8 Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae
Cause of “enzootic pneumonia” Other secondary pathogens APP Pasteurella multocida PRRSV Clinical signs-M. hyopneumoniae alone mild, dry, nonproductive cough

9 Pathogenesis Very slow to colonize and multiply
2 weeks+ to induce observable lesions 4-6 weeks before serum antibodies produced 4-8 weeks to resolution Organisms never eliminated from pig?

10 Adheres only to cilia of airways
Does not invade lung tissues

11 Disease Decrease the function of the mucociliary apparatus
decrease clearance of other pathogens and debris Modulation of the immune system immunosuppression-macrophages - APP immunostimulation-lymphocytes cytokine production

12 Pathology Chronic pneumonia 2-3 weeks for pneumonic lesions to appear
mild focal, well-demarcated area of cranioventral consolidation

13 Histopathology Bronchopneumonia
Perivascular and peribronchiolar cuffing Influx of lymphocytes and macrophages primarily B cells non-specific

14 Evasion of the Immune System
Mucosal pathogen location Structure and make up of surface slime layers capsule no cell wall

15 Proinflammatory Cytokines
TNF- IL-1 IL-6 Important in further inducing inflammation in the lungs

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17 Dual infection of Pigs with PRRSV and Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae
E.L. Thacker, P.G. Halbur, B.J. Thacker and R. F. Ross Iowa State University

18 Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus

19 PRRSV An Arterivirus Enveloped RNA virus all infect macrophages all cause prolonged infections High mutation rate due to method of replication = constant minor changes Accounts for differences between “isolates” No such thing as “strains”

20 Clinical Signs Severe to no clinical disease in the field
In our experimental model maximum pneumonia is 10 days fever, respiratory distress, lethargy, anorexia no cough pneumonia resolved by days

21 Pathology Diffuse, tan-mottled consolidation of the lungs

22 Evades the Immune System
Persists > 100 days Very slow to ineffective systemic immune response viremia in presence of antibodies can be reinfected by different strains alteration of immune response by directing cytokines

23 Experimental Design Three different inoculation protocols
PRRSV first (-10 days) M. hyopneumoniae first (-21 days) concurrent (0 days) Three necropsy dates 3 DPI 10 DPI – maximum PRRSV pneumonia 28 DPI – maximum mycoplasma pneumonia

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26 Conclusions Pigs infected with both M. hyopneumoniae and PRRSV: S
significantly increased clinical respiratory disease macroscopic lesions consistent with PRRSV-induced pneumonia lasted significantly longer increased M. hyopneumoniae-induced pneumonia at 10 days post infection with both

27 PRRSV- 10 DPI PRRSV - 28 DPI M. hyopneumoniae - 28 DPI Dual Infection - 28 DPI

28 Conclusions (cont.) No long term increase in M. hyopneumoniae-induced pneumonia macroscopically Pigs with minimal to no macroscopic mycoplasmal pneumonia lesions exhibited potentiation of PRRSV-induced pneumonia

29 WHY? Pathogenesis complement each other
M. hyopneumoniae attracts macrophages for PRRSV to infect both induce inflammation both direct the immune response from a Th1 towards a Th2 response production of IFN-γ is correlated to virus clearance delayed in pigs infected with both pathogens

30 Why? Immune system both evade the immune system
both modulate the immune system both chronic PRRSV-persistance M. hyopneumoniae chronic

31 Interaction between M. hyopneumoniae and SIV
E. Thacker, B. Thacker and B. Janke Iowa State University

32 What do we know M. hyo SIV infect epithelial cells (cilia)
causes a chronic pneumonia SIV infects epithelial cells causes acute pneumonia – but will last 3+ weeks histologically

33 Experimental Design M. hyopneumoniae strain 232 intratracheally (-21 Trial Day) ISU SIV inoculum (H1N1) nebulized intranasally (0 Trial Day) Pigs necropsied at 3, 7, 14 and 21 days post SIV infection

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36 Confusing Appearance

37 Results Dual infected pigs had highest coughing scores
Pneumonia lasted longer-additive in nature

38 Conclusions Unlike with PRRSV, SIV and M. hyopneumoniae appear to be additive Both infect epithelial cells – important for secondary pathogens Different pathogenesis than with PRRSV

39 Circovirus (PMWS)

40 PCV 2 alone induces minimal disease
Combined with PRRSV, Porcine Parvovirus results in significant increase in pneumonia Interaction and role of M. hyopneumoniae? Role of vaccination? Mechanism is unknown Can bet immune system is involved

41 Conclusions M. hyopneumoniae and PRRSV are both important factors in PRDC The pigs in our studies had no other pathogens these contribute to and interact with each other These studies are aimed at beginning to understand the interaction between the various pathogens

42 Conclusions (cont.) PCV 2 increasing in importance of disease interactions Other pathogens such as P. multocida and B. bronchiseptica present add to the disease Diagnostics become very important on individual farm settings to implement the appropriate controls

43 Conclusions (cont.) As our understanding of the pathogenesis increases, appropriate intervention strategies can be developed vaccines – very important new and current antibiotics strategic timing of above

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