Gayathri Gopakumar, Mauricio Jc Coppo, Carol A Hartley, Greg Underwood, Andrés Diaz-Méndez, Joanne M Devlin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) remains a significant viral disease in the poultry industry worldwide and vaccination has proven to be an invaluable tool for disease control. Vaccine type, dose and route of administration are important parameters that determine the success of vaccination programmes and control strategies. The current study aimed to investigate the optimal dose for drinking-water vaccination with ΔgG-ILTV, an attenuated glycoprotein G-deficient ILTV vaccine that is efficacious when administered by eye-drop. Three groups of one-week old specific-pathogen-free chickens were vaccinated with increasing doses of ΔgG-ILTV (103.8, 104.3 and 105.0 plaque forming units per bird) via the drinking-water. Additional groups of birds included an eye-drop vaccination control (n = 20), and two unvaccinated control groups (n = 20 and 10, respectively). Three weeks after vaccination, all groups, except one unvaccinated control group (n = 10), were challenged with virulent ILTV. Vaccine efficacy was assessed after challenge by recording mortality rate and scoring of clinical signs and gross tracheal pathology. Challenge resulted in severe clinical disease and a high mortality rate in unvaccinated birds. Eye-drop vaccination resulted in complete clinical protection against this specific challenge. The efficacy of drinking-water vaccination showed a direct association with the administered vaccine dose. Results from this study highlight the need for improved understanding of virus-host interactions and immunological responses that occur following drinking-water vaccination, in order to improve the efficacy of vaccination strategies that use this route.
期刊介绍:
Avian Pathology is the official journal of the World Veterinary Poultry Association and, since its first publication in 1972, has been a leading international journal for poultry disease scientists. It publishes material relevant to the entire field of infectious and non-infectious diseases of poultry and other birds. Accepted manuscripts will contribute novel data of interest to an international readership and will add significantly to knowledge and understanding of diseases, old or new. Subject areas include pathology, diagnosis, detection and characterisation of pathogens, infections of possible zoonotic importance, epidemiology, innate and immune responses, vaccines, gene sequences, genetics in relation to disease and physiological and biochemical changes in response to disease. First and subsequent reports of well-recognized diseases within a country are not acceptable unless they also include substantial new information about the disease or pathogen. Manuscripts on wild or pet birds should describe disease or pathogens in a significant number of birds, recognizing/suggesting serious potential impact on that species or that the disease or pathogen is of demonstrable relevance to poultry. Manuscripts on food-borne microorganisms acquired during or after processing, and those that catalogue the occurrence or properties of microorganisms, are unlikely to be considered for publication in the absence of data linking them to avian disease.