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. 2021 Apr 28;36(6):1261–1272. doi: 10.1007/s12250-021-00365-z

Table 2.

Tissue tropism of porcine bocavirus.

Tissue Key findings References
Lymph nodes The infection rates of PBoV in the PMWS-affected pigs were twice higher than in the non-PMWS affected pigs. The co-infection of PBoV along with the TTSV and PCV-2 might have facilitate the development of PMWS Blomström et al. (2009)
The co-existence of two bocavirus strain within the same fecal sample revealing inter and intra host genetic diversity Lau et al. (2011)
The genetic diversity of the circulating bocavirus strains in Xinjiang belong to three subgroups of three different genetic groups Meng et al. (2018)
Gastrointestinal tract The prevalence rate of PBoV was higher in stool samples and these viruses multiply in the intestinal tract of piglets Cheng et al. (2010)
Respiratory tract The first evidence of infection of weaning piglets with respiratory tract symptoms representing an emerging virus for swine respiratory tract diseases Zhai et al. (2010)
Nasopharyngeal sample PBoV were higher in nasopharyngeal samples in deceased pigs than in healthy pigs Lau et al. (2011)
Mesenteric lymph nodes The mesenteric lymph node had the highest detection rate suggesting the pathogenesis of PBoV infection involves the lymphoid tissues Jacob et al. (2018)
Inguinal lymph nodes 25% of the organ tested were positive for PBoV Jacob et al. (2018)
Spleen 23.5% of the spleen tested were positive for PBoV Jacob et al. (2018)
Tonsil Out of 80 tonsil samples, 23 samples were positive for the PBoV Saekhow and Ikeda (2014)
The tonsil had the second highest detection rate suggesting the pathogenesis of PBoV infection involves the lymphoid tissues Jacob et al. (2018)
Lung Porcine parvovirus 4 was similar to PBoV. After inoculation of tissue homogenate in the colostrum deprived piglets, clinical symptoms were observed. But due to coinfection with PCV-2. It was not clear whether PPV4 can cause disease on its own or contributed to the disease phenomenon Cheung et al. (2010)
One lungs tissue sample was positive for the PBoV without coinfection of the PCV-2, suggesting PBoV as not the risk factor the Hungarian pigs Csagola et al. (2012)
The first description of the prevalence of PBoV in Korean swine herds with the mean positive rate of 34.9% Choi et al. (2014)
33.3% of lungs tissues were positive for PBoV Jacob et al. (2018)
Kidney PBoV was detected from kidney tissues of two pigs suggesting the ability of virus to replicate within kidney cells causing renal pathology Jacob et al. (2018)
Cerebral tissue By using fluorescent in situ hybridization for histologic detection of encephalomyelitis assigns a potential role of PBoV in provoking CNS lesions Pfankuche et al. (2016)
Liver 25% of liver tissue were positive for PBoV Jacob et al. (2018)