| Literature DB >> 31524561 |
Saurabh Gupta1, Shoor Vir Singh1, Manju Singh1, Kundan Kumar Chaubey1, Kumaragurubaran Karthik2, A K Bhatia1, Naveen Kumar3, Kuldeep Dhama4.
Abstract
High endemicity of Johne's disease (JD) in herds adversely affects heavy milk yielding breeds by reducing the per animal productivity and 'productive life-span'. This review evaluates different vaccines used for its control and summarizes the benefits of 'global vaccine' in the four major domestic livestock species, namely goat, sheep, buffalo and cattle. Vaccines developed by using 'native strains' revealed both 'therapeutic' and preventive effects in domestic livestock. The 'therapeutic' role of vaccine in animals suffering from clinical JD turned out to be valuable in some cases by reversing the disease process and animals returning back to health and production. Good herd management, improved hygiene, 'test and cull' methodology, proper disposal of animal excreta and monitoring of MAP bio-load were also regarded as crucial in the 'therapeutic' management of JD. Vaccine approaches have been widely adopted in JD control programs and may be considered as a valuable adjunct in order to utilize huge populations of otherwise un-productive livestock. It has been shown that vaccination was the preeminent strategy to control JD, because it yielded approximately 3-4 times better benefit-to-cost ratios than other strategies. Internationally, 146 vaccine trials/studies have been conducted in different countries for the control of JD and have shown remarkable reduction in its national prevalence. It is concluded that for JD, there cannot be global vaccines or diagnostic kits as solutions have to come from locally prevalent strains of MAP. Despite some limitations, vaccines might still be an effective strategy to reduce or eradicate JD.Entities:
Keywords: Johne’s disease; livestock; production; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31524561 PMCID: PMC6831026 DOI: 10.1080/01652176.2019.1667042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Q ISSN: 0165-2176 Impact factor: 3.320
Transposon mutant vaccine candidates of MAP.
| Institution | Location of insertion | MAP strain | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| USDA-ARS-WRRC | MAP0482 | Goat strain 43432-02 | McGarvey, unpublished |
| University of Wisconsin | MAP3006c ( | K-10 | Bannantine, |
| Washington State University | MAP1047 ( | K-10 | Park et al. 2014 |
| University of Nebraska | MAP1566 | K-10 | Rathnaiah et al. 2014 |
| University of Nebraska | MAP3695 and | K-10 | Rathnaiah et al. 2014 |
| University of Nebraska | MAP0460 ( | K-10 | Rathnaiah et al. 2014 |
| University of Nebraska | MAP0282c and 0283c | K-10 | Rathnaiah et al. 2014 |
| University of Nebraska | MAP1566 | K-10 | Rathnaiah et al. 2014 |
| University of Nebraska | MAP2296c and 2297c | K-10 | Rathnaiah et al. 2014 |
| University of Nebraska | MAP1150c and 1151c | K-10 | Rathnaiah et al. 2014 |
| New York, USA | Strain 66115-98 | Faisal et al. | |
| University of Wisconsin | MAP1872c ( | ATCC19698 | Kabara and Coussens, 2012 |
| AgResearch NZ | MAP1566 | strain 989 | Scandurra et al. 2010 |
| AgResearch NZ | MAP0011 ( | K-10 | Scandurra et al. 2010 |
| Washington State University | MAP3893c ( | K-10 | Park et al. |
| Washington State University | MAP0460 ( | K-10 | Park et al. |
| University of Wisconsin | MAP3963 ( | ATCC19698 | Shin et al. 2006 |
| University of Wisconsin | MAP2408c ( | ATCC19698 | Shin et al. 2006 |
The location of the laboratory where the mutant(s) was constructed.
The MAP locus where the transposon had been inserted. If two genes are listed, the transposon is inserted in the intergenic region between the two. If the gene has been named, it is shown in parenthesis.
The parental strain of MAP used to create the mutation.
Commercial Johne’s disease vaccines in the international market.
| Sn | Name/kind of vaccine | Vaccine strain and bio-type | Adjuvants | Countries |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Fromm | MAP Strain 18, Killed | Oil type (Freund’s complete) | USA |
| 2. | Lio-Johne | 316F strain, Live attenuated | Oil type | Spain |
| 3. | Phylaxia | 5889 Bergey, Killed | Oil type | Hungary |
| 4. | Weybridge Vaccine | 316F strain, Live attenuated | Paraffin and olive oil with pumice stone powder | United Kingdom |
| 5. | Gudair# (Zoetis Pfizer) | MAP Strain 318F, Killed | Oil emulsion | Australia |
| 6. | Aqua Vax Map | Strain 316F, Live attenuated | Water based (saline) | New Zealand |
| 7. | Neoparasec (MerialNZ Ltd.) | Freeze Dried Live MAP, Live attenuated | Oil type | France |
| 8. | Mycopar# | Whole cell bacterin, inactivated | Oil emulsion | Germany |
| 9. | Silirum (Pfizer CSL) | MAP Strain 318F, Killed | Oil emulsion | Australia |
| 10. | Bio-JD Oil & Gel (Biovet Pvt. Ltd.)b | Native MAP strain ‘S 5’ 'Indian Bison type', Inactivated | Aluminium hydroxide gel (Gudair, Spain), Gerbu adjuvant (Gerbubiotechnik, Germany) | India (2004–2014)* |
aFor sheep and goats.
bFor goats, sheep, cattle and buffaloes licensed by Drug Controller, Government of India (DCGI, New Delhi, license no. KTK/28D/11/2008) and candidate vaccine strain and technology has been transferred to M/S Biovetpvt. Ltd., Bengaluru, India.
Effects of vaccination on shedding of MAP bacilli (globally).
| Sn | Name/kind of vaccine | Country | Species (breed) | Reduction (%) | Period of study | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Laboratory Scale (Live) | USA | Cattle | 81.4 | – | Larsen et al. |
| 2. | Fromm (Killed) | USA | Cattle | 99.1 | – | Hurley et al. |
| 3. | Live attenuated | USA | Cattle | 90.0 | – | Saxegaard&Fodstad, |
| 4. | Laboratory Scale (Live) | Denmark | Cattle | 92.9 | – | Jorgensen, |
| 5. | Laboratory Scale (Live) | France | Cattle | 81.6 | 5 years | Argente, |
| 6. | Phylaxia (Killed) | Hungary | Cattle | 94.7 | – | Kormendy, |
| 7. | Neoparasec (Live) | Germany | Cattle | 86.8 | – | Klawonnet al. |
| 8. | Lio-Johne (Live) | Spain | Sheep | 80.8 | – | Aduriz, |
| 9. | Laboratory Scale (Live) | Greece | Sheep | 93.2 | – | Dimareli-Malli et al. |
| 10. | Gudair (Killed) | Australia | Sheep | 90.0 | – | Eppleston et al. |
| 11. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Barbari) | 82.1 | – | Singh et al. |
| 12. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Barbari type) | 62.1 | 7 months | Singh et al. |
| 13. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Jamunapari) | 26.8 | 7 months | Singh et al. |
| 14. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Sheep (Bharat Merino) | 27.3 | 3 years | Singh et al. |
| 15. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Sheep (Patanwadi) | 17.1 | 4 months | Shroff et al. |
| 16. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Mehsana) | 5.8 | 4 months | Singh et al. |
| 17. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Cattle (H/Fb) | 46.6 | 6 months | Rawatet al. |
| 18 | Commercial Scale (In-activated) | India | Cattle (Hariana type) | 89.3 | 9 months | Singh et al. |
| 19 | Commercial Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Jakhrana) | 45.5 | 12 months | Singh et al. |
aIndigenous vaccine is now commercialized.
bHolstein Friesian breed.
Effects of vaccination on production parameters (mortality or clinical cases).
| Sn | Name/kind of vaccine | Country | Species (breed) | Reduction (%) | Period of study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Weybridge (Live) | UK | Cattle | 99.06 | – | Wilesmith, |
| 2. | Lelystad (Killed) | The Netherlands | Cattle | 91.82 | – | Kaliset al. |
| 3. | Lio-Johne (Live) | Spain | Sheep | 78.29 | – | Aduriz, |
| 4. | Gudair (Killed) | Australia | Sheep | 87.5 | – | Windsor et al. |
| 5. | Neoparasec (Live) | New Zealand | Sheep | 71.43 | One year | Gwozdzet al. |
| 6. | Laboratory Scale (Live) | Greece | Goat | 82.78 | – | Xenoset al. |
| 7. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Barbari type) | 54.8 | 7 months | Singh et al. |
| 8. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Jamunapari) | 24.6 | 7 months | Singh et al. |
| 9. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Mehsana) | 40.0 | 4 months | Singh et al. |
| 10. | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Cattle (H/F) | 95.0 | 6 months | Rawatet al. |
| 11. | Commercial Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Jakhrana) | 53.8 | 12 months | Singh et al. |
Indigenous vaccine is now commercialized.
Holstein Friesian breed.
Effects of vaccination on histological lesions (globally).
| Sn | Name/kind of vaccine | Country | Species (breed) | Reduction (%) | Period of study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Laboratory Scale (Killed) | The Netherlands | Cattle | 58.9 | 12 years | van Schaik et al. |
| 2 | Silirum (Killed) | Spain | Cattle | 38.6 | – | García-Pariente et al. |
| 3 | Laboratory Scale (Killed) | Iceland | Sheep | 93.5 | – | Sigurdsson, |
| 4 | Lio-Johne (Live) | Spain | Sheep | 100.0 | – | Aduriz, |
| 5 | Mycopar (Killed) | USA | Sheep | 75.3 | – | Thonney and Smith, |
| 6 | Gudair (Killed) | Australia | Sheep | 72.7 | 5 years | Reddacliff et al. |
| 7 | Gudair (Killed) | New Zealand | Sheep | 75.5 | 16 months | Griffin et al. |
| 8 | Laboratory Scale (Live) | Norway | Goat | 97.1 | 14 years | Saxegaard and Fodstad, |
| 9 | Gudair (Killed) | Spain | Goat | 65.8 | – | Corpa et al. |
| 10 | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | USA | Goat | 66.6 | ∼9 months | Kathaperumal et al. |
| 11 | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Barbari) | 75.0 | – | Singh et al. |
| 12 | Laboratory Scale (In-activated) | India | Goat (Barbari) | 57.1 | 7 months | Singh et al. |
| 13 | Commercial Scale (In-activated) | India | Cattle (Hariana type) | 66.7 | 4 months | Singh et al. |
Indigenous vaccine is now commercialized.