| Literature DB >> 26065009 |
Hetron Mweemba Munang'andu1, Øystein Evensen1.
Abstract
Vaccine efficacy in aquaculture has for a long time depended on evaluating relative percent survival and antibody responses after vaccination. However, current advances in vaccine immunology show that the route in which antigens are delivered into cells is deterministic of the type of adaptive immune response evoked by vaccination. Antigens delivered by the intracellular route induce MHC-I restricted CD8+ responses while antigens presented through the extracellular route activate MHC-II restricted CD4+ responses implying that the route of antigen delivery is a conduit to induction of B- or T-cell immune responses. In finfish, different antigen delivery systems have been explored that include live, DNA, inactivated whole virus, fusion protein, virus-like particles, and subunit vaccines although mechanisms linking these delivery systems to protective immunity have not been studied in detail. Hence, in this review we provide a synopsis of different strategies used to administer viral antigens via the intra- or extracellular compartments. Further, we highlight the differences in immune responses induced by antigens processed by the endogenous route compared to exogenously processed antigens. Overall, we anticipate that the synopsis put together in this review will shed insights into limitations and successes of the current vaccination strategies used in finfish vaccinology.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26065009 PMCID: PMC4433699 DOI: 10.1155/2015/960859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Fish antigen presenting and adaptive immunity cell receptors.
| Protein | Selected examples of fish species | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| (1) Antigen presenting surface markers and MHC molecules | ||
| CD80 (B7.1) | Zebrafish, rainbow trout | [ |
| CD83 (7.2) | Zebrafish, turbot, Atlantic salmon | [ |
| CD86 | Zebrafish, rainbow trout | [ |
| CD209 | Zebrafish | [ |
| MHC-I | Orange spotted grouper, sea bass, grass carp | [ |
| MHC-II | Zebrafish, lake trout, | [ |
|
| ||
| (2) T-cell receptors, costimulatory and activator molecules | ||
| CD3 | Atlantic salmon | [ |
| CD3 | Atlantic salmon | [ |
| CD3 | Atlantic salmon | [ |
| CD3 | Rainbow trout, Atlantic salmon | [ |
| TCR | Rainbow trout and Japanese flounder | [ |
| TCR | Rainbow trout and Japanese flounder | [ |
| TCRΥ | Japanese flounder | [ |
| TCR | Japanese flounder | [ |
| CD28 | Rainbow trout | [ |
| CTLA | Rainbow trout | [ |
| CD40L | Atlantic salmon and Japanese flounder | [ |
|
| ||
| (3) T-cells | ||
| CD8 | Rainbow trout, Atlantic salmon | [ |
| CD8 | Atlantic salmon, Atlantic salmon | [ |
| CD4 | Atlantic salmon | [ |
|
| ||
| (4) Immunoglobulins | ||
| IgM | Atlantic salmon, rainbow trout | [ |
| IgD | Atlantic salmon, rainbow trout | [ |
| IgT | Rainbow trout, Atlantic salmon | [ |
| IgZ | Zebrafish | [ |
Figure 1The endogenous and exogenous pathways of viral antigen entry into host cells. (a) Endogenous pathway shows viral antigens that enter the host cells by the intracellular route. Once internalized, the viral antigens are degraded into peptides by proteasomes. Thereafter, the processed antigenic peptides are transported via the transporter associated with antigen presentation (TAPs) to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) where they are loaded onto MHC-I molecules for presentation at the cell surface to CD8+ T-cells. (b) Exogenous pathway shows antigens that enter the antigen presenting cells (APCs) via the extracellular route which results in internalization of the antigens in the endosomes. Thereafter, the endosomes fuse with the lysosomes to form the endosomal-lysosomal compartments that have MHC-II complexes. In the endosomal-lysosomal compartments, the antigens are degraded into peptides followed by packaging of the peptides onto MHC-II complexes. Thereafter, the MHC-II complexes carrying the peptides are transported to the cell surface for presentation of the antigenic peptides to the CD4 T-cells.
Live vaccines.
| Virus | Abbreviation | Fish host | Mode of attenuation | Protection | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyprinid herpesvirus subtype 3 | CyHV-3 | Carp | Natural selection | High | [ |
|
| |||||
| Viral hemorrhagic septicemia | VHSV | Rainbow trout | Naturally attenuated | High | [ |
| VHSV | Rainbow trout | Naturally attenuated | High | [ | |
| VHSV | Olive flounder | Recombinant (RG) modification | High | [ | |
| VHSV | Rainbow trout | Recombinant (RG) modification | High | [ | |
| VHSV | Zebra fish | Recombinant (RG) modification | High | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus | IHNV | Rainbow trout | Multiple serial passage | High | [ |
| IHNV | Rainbow trout | Naturally attenuated | High | [ | |
| IHNV | Rainbow trout | Natural selection | High | [ | |
| IHNV | Rainbow trout | Recombinant (RG) modification | High | [ | |
| IHNV | Rainbow trout | Recombinant (RG) modification | High | [ | |
|
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| Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus | IPNV | Atlantic salmon | Avirulent strain/low dose | High | [ |
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| Rock bream iridovirus | RSIV | Rock bream | Low temperature | High | [ |
DNA vaccines explored in fish.
| Classification | Virus family | Pathogen | Abbreviation | Antigen | Protection∗ | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DNA viruses | Iridovirus | Red sea bream iridovirus | RSIV | Major capsid | Moderate | [ |
| Herpesviridae | Channel catfish virus (CCV) | CCV | ORF 6&59 | Low | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| RNA virus | Rhabdoviridae | Viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus | VHSV | G | High | [ |
| Rhabdoviridae | Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus | IHNV | G | High | [ | |
| Rhabdoviridae | Spring viremia of carp virus | SVCV | G | High | [ | |
| Rhabdoviridae |
| HRV | G | High | [ | |
| Birnaviridae | Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus | IPNV | SegA/VP2 | Moderate | [ | |
| Orthomyxoviridae | Infectious salmon anemia virus | ISAV | HE | Moderate | [ | |
| Togaviridae | Salmon alphavirus subtype 3 | SAV-3 | E2 | Moderate | [ | |
| Nodaviridae | Atlantic halibut nodavirus | ANHV | Capsid | Low | [ | |
∗Protection was determined by postchallenge relative percent survival (RPS).
Figure 2The fusion of the VP2- of IPNV to the Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A (PE). PE shows a 602 aa exotoxin for Pseudomonas aeruginosa made of three domains. Domain Ia (blue) located on 1–252 aa followed by domain II (green) on the location 253–364 aa, domain Ib (blue) located on 365–404 aa, and finally domain III on the extreme end located on 405–601 aa. PJJ9 (ΔIII) is a 425 aa long intermediate phase in which the toxic moiety of domain III has been cleaved. PE-VP2-KE is the final construct in which the toxic moiety of domain III has been replaced with the truncated VP2 (yellow) immunogenic protein of infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV). Note that the VP2 is attached to the KDEL3 signaling peptide (red).
Nanoparticle vaccines.
| Virus | Virus | Fish host | Admin | Antigen | Type | Protection∗ | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lymphocytic virus | LCDV | Japanese flounder | Oral | Plasmid DNA | PLGA | High | [ |
| Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus | IHNV | Rainbow trout | Oral | Plasmid DNA | PLGA | Low | [ |
| Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus | IPNV | Atlantic salmon | Injection | IWV | PLGA | Low | [ |
| Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus | IPNV | Atlantic salmon | Injection | IWV | PLGA | Low | [ |
| White syndromes spot virus | WSSV | Shrimp | Oral | Plasmid DNA | Chitosan | ND | [ |
| White syndromes spot virus | WSSV | Shrimp | Oral | Plasmid DNA | Chitosan | ND | [ |
∗Protection was determined by postchallenge relative percent survival (RPS). ND = not done (not tested for protection).
Inactivated whole virus vaccines explored in fish.
| Pathogen | Abbreviation | Virus family | Fish species | Protection | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus | VHSV | Rhabdoviridae | Rainbow trout | High∗ | [ |
| Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus | IHNV | Rhabdoviridae | Rainbow trout | High∗ | [ |
| Spring viremia of carp virus | SVCV | Rhabdoviridae | Carp | High∗ | [ |
| Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus | IPNV | Birnaviridae | Atlantic salmon | High∗ |
[ |
| Salmon pancreas disease virus | SPDV | Togaviridae | Rainbow trout | High2 | [ |
| Red seabream iridovirus | RSIV | Iridovirus | Sea bass | High∗ | [ |
| Singapore grouper iridovirus | SGIV | Iridovirus | Grouper | High∗ | [ |
| Channel catfish virus | CCV | Herpesviridae | Catfish | Moderate/high∗ | [ |
| Cyprinid herpesvirus subtype-3 | CyHV-3 | Herpesviridae | Carp | High∗ | [ |
| Nervous necrosis virus | NNV | Betanodaviridae | Grouper | High1 | [ |
| Nervous necrosis virus | NNV | Betanodaviridae | Sea bass | High1 | [ |
| Salmon anemia virus | SAV | Orthomyxoviridae | Atlantic salmon | High∗ | [ |
Protection measured by ∗relative percent survival (RPS), 1protection against postchallenge virus infection, and 2pathology.
Subunit vaccines.
| Virus | Abbreviation | Protein | Vector | Efficacy | Fish species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus | IPNV | VP2 |
| Low | Atlantic salmon | [ |
| IPNV | VP2 | Yeast cells | Low | Rainbow trout | [ | |
| IPNV | VP2/3 |
| Low | Rainbow trout | [ | |
| IPNV | VP2 | Baculovirus | Low | Atlantic salmon | [ | |
| IPNV | VP2 | Semliki Forest virus | N/A | CHSE cells | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| Viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus | VHSV | G |
| — | Rainbow trout | [ |
| VHSV | G |
| High | Rainbow trout | [ | |
| VHSV | G |
| Moderate-high | Rainbow trout | [ | |
| VHSV | G | Baculovirus | high | Rainbow trout | [ | |
| VHSV | G |
| Moderate | Olive flounder | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus | IHNV | G |
| Moderate | Rainbow trout | [ |
| IHNV | G |
| Low | Rainbow trout | [ | |
| IHNV | G | Baculovirus | Moderate | Rainbow trout | [ | |
| IHNV | G |
| Moderate-high | Rainbow trout | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| GCRV | VP4 |
| Moderate-high | Grass carp | [ | |
| GCRV | VP5, VP7 |
| Moderate | Grass carp | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| VER | Capsid |
| Low | Atlantic halibut | [ | |
Subviral, immature, and virus-like particles used for fish vaccines.
| Virus | Classification | Protein | Cells/vector | Fish host | Protection | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NNV | VLP | Capsid |
| Orange spotted grouper | ND∗ | [ |
| NNV | VLP | Capsid |
| Red spotted grouper | ND∗ | [ |
| IPNV | VLP | VP2 | Baculovirus/insect larvae | Rainbow trout | Low | [ |
| IPNV | IVP | VP2 | CHSE cells | Rainbow trout | ND∗ | [ |
| IPNV | SVP | VP2 | Yeast cells | Rainbow trout | Low |
[ |
| IPNV | SVP | VP2 | Yeast cells | Rainbow trout | Low | [ |
| GCRV | SVP | Capsid |
| Grass carp | ND∗ | [ |
| VNNV | VLP | Capsid | Baculovirus | European sea bass | High | [ |
| NNV | VLP | Capsid | Baculovirus | Orange spotted grouper | High | [ |
| NNV | VLP | Capsid |
| Dragon and Malabar grouper | ND∗ | [ |
| VHSV | Peptide | Nucleoprotein | Rainbow trout | ND∗ | [ |
ND = Note done (No protection studies carried out).
∗Only immune expression studies were carried out by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) or gene expression.
Comparison of the intra- and extracellular antigen processing parameters.
| Parameters | Intracellular antigen delivery | Extracellular antigen delivery |
|---|---|---|
| Vaccine types | ||
| Viability of antigens | Mostly replicative | Nonreplicative |
| Examples of vaccine types | Live and DNA vaccines | IWV vaccines, subunit vaccines |
| Antigen uptake and presentation | ||
| Pathway of uptake into host cells | Endogenous pathway | Exogenous pathway |
| Antigen uptake and processing | Penetration of host cell membrane | Phagocytosis by APCs |
| Site of antigen deposition | Cytoplasm | Endosome/phagosome |
| Antigen presenting molecules | MHC-I and MHC-II | MHC-II |
| Mode of antigen processing | Proteosomal degradation | Endosomal degradation |
| Adaptive immunity | ||
| Type of immune response induced | Cellular and humoral immune responses | Humoral immune responses |
| Cell types involved | B- and T-lymphocytes | B-lymphocytes |
| T-cell subtypes | CD4 and CD8 T-cells | CD4 T-cells |
| Effector molecules/cells | CTL (cellular) and antibodies (humoral) | Antibodies |
| Effector mechanisms | CTL killing of virus infected cells | Antibody-neutralization of virus |
| Antibody-neutralization of virus |