Presence of antibodies reacting with porcine circovirus in sera of humans, mice, and cattle

Abstract
Antibodies reacting with porcine circovirus (PCV) were found in sera of humans, mice, and cattle by means of an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) and an ELISA. In man, the highest seroprevalence (23.9% in IFA and 30.2% in ELISA) was found among hospitalized patients with fever of partially unclear etiology. Non-hospitalized “healthy” persons of the former German Democratic Republic showed a significantly higher number of positive sera (IFA=20%) than blood donors from Berlin-West (IFA=8.6%). Murine sera reacted positive with PCV in IFA between 12 to 69% in different breeding groups and about 35% of cattle sera were found reactive with PCV in IFA. Double-staining IFAs, immuno-electron microscopy and immunoblotting showed that non-porcine antibodies reacted with PCV structural antigen. Mathematical analysis releaved that in ELISA, non-porcine antibodies reacted specifically with PCV. Loss of binding specificity of non-porcine antibodies in ELISA after storage of sera and lower maximal optical densities obtained at equal titers in ELISA with non-porcine than with porcine sera suggest that antibodies in man, mice and cattle are caused by related species specific viruses sharing antigenic epitopes with PCV.