Literature DB >> 10470278

Foot-and-mouth disease and beyond: vaccine design, past, present and future.

F Brown1.   

Abstract

The first experimental vaccines against foot-and-mouth disease were made in 1925 by Vallee, Carre and Rinjard using formaldehyde inactivation of tongue tissue from cattle infected with the virus. This method was essentially unaltered until the late 1940s when the important experiments by Frenkel in Holland showed that the quantities of virus required for vaccine production could be obtained from fragments of tongue epithelium incubated in vitro following infection with the virus. This major step made possible the comprehensive vaccination programmes which followed in Western Europe and which, in turn, resulted in the elimination of the disease from that part of the world by 1989. This spectacular success has led many to question whether other kinds of vaccine are required to control the disease worldwide. Such reservations ignore the danger to the environment associated with the growth of large amounts of virus. This can never be a zero-risk situation. Consequently, a vaccine which is not based on infectious virus as starting material has many attractions from safety considerations alone. In addition, a vaccine based on more fundamental considerations would not only be more aesthetically satisfying but could possibly provide an understanding at the molecular level of antigenic variation, still a problem in the control of the disease. The advances in our knowledge of the structure of the virus and the fragments which elicit a protective immune response now allow us to envisage a vaccine which does not require infectious virus and which protects against the multiple serotypes of the agent. Since antigenic variation is still a major problem in the control of the disease by vaccination, such a product would have important advantages over the current vaccines.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10470278     DOI: 10.1007/978-3-7091-6425-9_13

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Virol Suppl        ISSN: 0939-1983


  4 in total

1.  Vaccination against foot-and-mouth disease: the implications for Canada.

Authors:  Sarah Kahn; Dorothy W Geale; Paul R Kitching; Alice Bouffard; Denis G Allard; J Robert Duncan
Journal:  Can Vet J       Date:  2002-05       Impact factor: 1.008

2.  In vitro evolution and affinity-maturation with Coliphage qβ display.

Authors:  Claudia Skamel; Stephen G Aller; Alain Bopda Waffo
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-11-13       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Foot-and-mouth disease virus can induce a specific and rapid CD4+ T-cell-independent neutralizing and isotype class-switched antibody response in naïve cattle.

Authors:  Nicholas Juleff; Miriam Windsor; Eric A Lefevre; Simon Gubbins; Pip Hamblin; Elizabeth Reid; Kerry McLaughlin; Peter C L Beverley; Ivan W Morrison; Bryan Charleston
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2009-01-28       Impact factor: 5.103

4.  Intranasal immunization of guinea pigs with an immunodominant foot-and-mouth disease virus peptide conjugate induces mucosal and humoral antibodies and protection against challenge.

Authors:  D Fischer; D Rood; R W Barrette; A Zuwallack; E Kramer; F Brown; L K Silbart
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2003-07       Impact factor: 5.103

  4 in total

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