| Literature DB >> 26212003 |
Yulin Zhang1, Hang Zeng1, Peng Liu1, Lin Liu1, Junke Xia1, Lin Wang1, Qinghua Zou1, Ling Wang2, Hui Zhuang3.
Abstract
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection has become a significant global public health concern as increasing cases of acute and chronic hepatitis E are reported. HEV of animal origin was proved to be a possible source of human infection and a previous study showed that the recent licensed HEV 239 vaccine can serve as a candidate vaccine to manage animal sources of HEV infection. However, previous immunization strategy for rabbits was the same as that for human, which is too costly to conduct large-scale animal vaccination. In an effort to reduce the costs, three vaccination schemes were assessed in the present study. Forty specific pathogen-free (SPF) rabbits were divided randomly into five groups with eight animals for each and inoculated intramuscularly with different doses of HEV 239 and placebo, respectively. All animals were challenged intravenously with swine HEV-4 and rabbit HEV of different titers 7 weeks after the initial immunization and then fecal virus excretion was monitored for 10 weeks. The results indicated that immunizing rabbits with two 10μg doses of the vaccine is superior to vaccination with two 20μg doses or a single 30μg dose, which can protect rabbits against homologous and heterologous HEV infection. These findings could enable implementation of large-scale animal vaccination to prevent rabbit HEV infection and zoonotic transmission.Entities:
Keywords: HEV 239 vaccine; Hepatitis E virus; Immunization strategy; Rabbits; Zoonotic transmission
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26212003 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.07.040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641