| Literature DB >> 34201761 |
Hanna Turlewicz-Podbielska1, Anna Kuriga1, Rafał Niemyjski2, Grzegorz Tarasiuk2, Małgorzata Pomorska-Mól1.
Abstract
Prevention and control of African swine fever virus (ASFV) in Europe, Asia, and Africa seem to be extremely difficult in view of the ease with which it spreads, its high resistance to environmental conditions, and the many obstacles related to the introduction of effective specific immunoprophylaxis. Biological properties of ASFV indicate that the African swine fever (ASF) pandemic will continue to develop and that only the implementation of an effective and safe vaccine will ensure a reduction in the spread of ASFV. At present, vaccines against ASF are not available. The latest approaches to the ASFV vaccine's design concentrate on the development of either modified live vaccines by targeted gene deletion from different isolates or subunit vaccines. The construction of an effective vaccine is hindered by the complex structure of the virus, the lack of an effective continuous cell line for the isolation and propagation of ASFV, unpredictable and stain-specific phenotypes after the genetic modification of ASFV, a risk of reversion to virulence, and our current inability to differentiate infected animals from vaccinated ones. Moreover, the design of vaccines intended for wild boars and oral administration is desirable. Despite several obstacles, the design of a safe and effective vaccine against ASFV seems to be achievable.Entities:
Keywords: African swine fever; African swine fever virus; immunoprophylaxis; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34201761 PMCID: PMC8310326 DOI: 10.3390/v13071212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Cases and outbreaks of ASF in 2021 [16].
| Region | Country | Animal Category |
|---|---|---|
| Africa | Namibia | Domestic |
| Nigeria | Domestic | |
| Sierra Leone | Domestic | |
| South Africa | Domestic | |
| Tanzania | Domestic | |
| Zambia | Domestic | |
| Asia | China (People’s Rep. of) | Domestic and wild |
| Hong Kong | Domestic | |
| India | Domestic | |
| Indonesia | Domestic | |
| Korea (Dem People’s Rep. of) | Domestic | |
| Korea (Rep. of) | Domestic and wild | |
| Laos | Domestic | |
| Malaysia | Domestic and wild | |
| Myanmar | Domestic | |
| Philippines | Domestic | |
| Timor-Leste | Domestic | |
| Vietnam | Domestic | |
| Europe | Bulgaria | Domestic |
| Estonia | Domestic and wild | |
| Germany | Wild | |
| Greece | Domestic | |
| Hungary | Wild | |
| Latvia | Wild | |
| Lithuania | Domestic and wild | |
| Moldova | Domestic and wild | |
| Poland | Domestic and wild | |
| Romania | Domestic and wild | |
| Russia | Domestic and wild | |
| Serbia | Domestic and wild | |
| Slovakia | Domestic and wild | |
| Ukraine | Domestic and wild | |
| Oceania | Papua New Guinea | Domestic |
Figure 1The number of ASF outbreaks around the world from January 2020 to March 2021 [16].
Figure 2Potential routes of ASFV transmission to pigs.
Promising vaccines against ASFV developed in 2015–2021.
| ASFV Strain | Virulence | Genotype (P27) | Deleted Genes | Deletion Mutant | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Georgia 2010 | II | I177L | ASFV-G-ΔI177L | full attenuation in pigs | [ | |
| Georgia 2010 | II | I177L | ASFV-G-ΔI177L | Oronasal administration is as effective as i.m. administration, animals remained clinically healthy after challenge with ASFV-G, and the specific antibody response was on the same level | [ | |
| HLJ/18 | High | II | Gene segments MGF505-1R, MGF505-2R, MGF505-3R, MGF360-12L, MGF360-13L, MGF360-14L | HLj/18-7GD | full attenuation in pigs, assurance of complete immunity against lethal ASFV challenge, unable to be converted to the virulent strain | [ |
| OURT 88/3 | Low | I | I329L | OURT88/3ΔI329L | inhibits the host’s innate immune response, | [ |
| L v17/WB/Rie1217 | II | 92% protection in wild boars after challenge with the virulent ASF virus isolate Arm07 | [ | |||
| Georgia 2007 | High | II | 9GL (B119L) | full attenuation in pigs | [ |