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Spray-dried porcine plasma (SDPP) is used as a functional ingredient in weaning diets for piglets. In 2014, Canadian feed-related
cases of Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus (PEDV) prompted the need for a risk assessment of PEDV in SDPP. Infected pigs shed
high amounts of infective virus in feces but PEDV RNA has also been detected in saliva and acute phase serum. Besides prevalence
of infection in market-age pigs, the applied collection method may also affect PEDV load in raw abattoir blood. Still Heat-Alkalinity-
Time (HAT) pasteurization, spray-drying and storage at low water activity effectively inactivate PEDV. We examined temperature
dependency of non-specific antiviral effects of porcine plasma against PEDV. Dilutions of plasma in cell culture medium were mixed
with PEDV strain CV777 and incubated at 4°C or 37°C. Residual infectivity was determined on Vero-Ba cells. Refrigerated plasma
did not neutralize PEDV. Only in the presence of 90% plasma, PEDV was considerably sensitive to incubation at 37°C; where 105.65
PFU PEDV/ml was reduced to 100.68 PFU/ml in 2 hours. These in vitro data suggest that PEDV would not remain infectious for
more than a few hours in the blood of live pigs. As abattoir blood is refrigerated upon collection, non-specific plasma components
would not substantially neutralize PEDV derived from cross-contamination. Acute phase serum indeed did not transmit PEDV in a
bioassay but virus-spiked refrigerated pig serum did. Present study demonstrates that plasma components contribute to the level of
safety obtained through temperature-based wet processes in the production of SDPP.
Biography
Isabelle Kalmar holds a degree in Veterinary Medicine and in Laboratory Animal Sciences. She completed a PhD in Veterinary Medicine on the topic of nutrition and
feeding behavior of pet birds and performed Postdoctoral studies in Immunology at Ghent University. She completed a second PhD in the field of Nutrition related metabolic
diseases in broilers obtained at the Department of Animal Sciences of Wageningen University. She is the Senior Veterinary Scientist at VEOS group, a producer of animalbased
food and feed ingredients with focus on plasma proteins. She has published over 30 papers in reputable journals.
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