| Literature DB >> 26457302 |
Tongyan Wang1, Yan Xiao1, Qingyuan Yang1, Yuzhou Wang1, Zhe Sun1, Chaoling Zhang1, Shijun Yan1, Juan Wang1, Linghua Guo1, He Yan1, Zhiyu Gao1, Lilin Wang1, Xiangdong Li1, Feifei Tan1, Kegong Tian2.
Abstract
The new-emerging PRV variants plague the vaccinated pigs and caused huge economic loss to local pig industry in China since 2011. The current commercial PRV vaccines cannot provide complete protection as the new-emerging PRV variants are antigenically different from the classical viruses. It is urgent to develop more safe and effective PRV vaccines based on the current circulating field isolates. In this study, a gE gene-deleted PRV based on the PRV HN1201, a representative PRV variant, was generated and the efficacy was tested on 3-week-old pigs in the form of killed vaccine. After fatal PRV HN1201 challenge, all vaccinated pigs survived without showing any clinical symptoms, but all unvaccinated pigs exhibited pseudorabies-specific respiratory and neurological signs with 100% mortality rate within 6 days after infection. The vaccinated pigs developed high level of gB and neutralizing antibodies after vaccination which may correlate to the protection provided by vaccine. Therefore, this gE gene-deleted PRV could be a promising vaccine candidate for the control of currently epidemic pseudorabies in China.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26457302 PMCID: PMC4589612 DOI: 10.1155/2015/684945
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Sequences of oligonucleotides used in PCR. Underlined nucleotide sequences are corresponding restriction enzyme sites.
| Primer | Sequence | Details |
|---|---|---|
| TKA-F | 5′-CCG | Left homologous arm of TK gene |
| TKA-R | 5′-CTAG | |
| TKB-F | 5′-ACAT | Right homologous arm of TK gene |
| TKB-R | 5′-CCC | |
| CMVU | 5′-ACGCGTCGACTAGTTATTAATAGTAATCAATTACG-3′ | |
| SV40R | 5′-GGCCGACGTCGACCTAGAATGCAGTGAAAAAAATGC-3′ | |
| gpt-F | 5′-CCGCTCGAGCTATGAGCGAAAAATACATCGTCAC-3′ | |
| gpt-R | 5′-CGCGGATCCGCGACCGGAGATTGGCGGGACGA-3′ | |
| PRVgE-F | 5′-CTTCCACTCGCAGCTCTTCTC-3′ | PCR to detect virus shedding from nasal swabs |
| PRVgE-R | 5′-GTTAAGTTCTCGCGCGAGT-3′ |
Figure 1Schematic representation of the strategy used to produce infectious PRV HN1201ΔgE (a) and confirmation of PRV HN1201ΔgE-GFP by detection of gE and gB protein using indirect fluorescence assay (b).
The number of pigs excreting virulent PRV from nasal swabs after viral challenge.
| Group | 0 dpc | 1 dpc | 2 dpc | 3 dpc | 4 dpc | 5 dpc | 6 dpc | 7 dpc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccinated | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Unvaccinated | 0 | 2 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 1 | 1 | N/A |
N/A = not applicable.
Figure 2Replication kinetics (a) and plaque size (b) of PRV HN1201ΔgE and parental PRV HN1201. ∗∗ indicates P < 0.01.
Figure 3Body temperature (a), daily body weight gains within first 4 days (b), and survival rate (c) of pigs after PRV HN1201 challenge. ∗ indicates P < 0.05 and ∗∗ indicates P < 0.01.
Figure 4Histopathological results of unvaccinated (a–d) and vaccinated pigs (e–h). (a) Tonsil. Tonsillar lymphoid tissue necrosis and formation of big necrotic foci. (b) Lung. Massive vascular congestion. (c) Mesenteric lymph node. Vascular dilatation and formation of big necrotic foci. (d) Cerebellum. Purkinje cell degeneration and necrosis. (e–h) Tonsil, lung, lymph node, and cerebellum samples from vaccinated pigs. Original magnification ×200.
Figure 5Immunochemistry staining of tonsil (a, e), lung (b, f), mesenteric lymph node (c, g), and cerebellum samples of unvaccinated (a–d) and vaccinated pigs (e–h). Original magnification ×200.
Figure 6Profile of PRV gB-specific (a), gE-specific (b), and neutralizing antibody (c) responses after vaccination.