| Literature DB >> 31767075 |
He Zhang1, Fulong Nan2, Zhuoxin Li3, Guanyu Zhao2, Changzhan Xie3, Zhuo Ha4, Jinyong Zhang3, Jicheng Han5, Pengpeng Xiao6, Xinyu Zhuang1, Wei Wang7, Jinying Ge8, Mingyao Tian1, Huijun Lu9, Zhigao Bu10, Ningyi Jin11.
Abstract
Highly pathogenic porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (HP-PRRS) poses a significant threat to the pig industry, for which vaccination is considered to be an effective means of prevention and control. Here, we developed two recombinant Newcastle disease virus (NDV) LaSota-vectored PRRS candidate vaccines, rLaSota-GP5 and rLaSota-GP3-GP5, using reverse genetic techniques. The two recombinant viruses exhibited a high degree of genetic stability after 10 successive generations in chicken embryos. There was no significant difference in pathogenicity compared with the rLaSota parent strain in poultry, mice and pigs. The recombinant viruses could not be detected in the feeding environment of immunized pigs, but could be detected in the organs and tissues of pigs for no more than 10 days after immunization. Importantly, in contrast to rLaSota-GP5, rLaSota-GP3-GP5 elicited both significant humoral and cellular immune responses in pigs. In particular, the neutralizing antibody titer in the rLaSota-GP3-GP5 group was 1.51 times significantly higher than that of the commercial vaccine group at 42 days post-immunization. At the same time, there was significant difference in the level of IFN-γ between the rLaSota-GP3-GP5 group and the commercial vaccine group. Furthermore, the viral load in the organs and tissues of rLaSota-GP3-GP5-immunized pigs was substantially lower than that of unimmunized pigs after being challenged with HP-PRRS virus GD strain. These results suggest that rLaSota-GP3-GP5 is a safe and promising candidate vaccine, and there is potential for further development of a recombinant virus vaccine for PRRS using NDV.Entities:
Keywords: GP3/GP5 protein; Highly pathogenic PRRS; Immunogenicity; Recombinant NDV vectored vaccine
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31767075 DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2019.108490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Microbiol ISSN: 0378-1135 Impact factor: 3.293