Publications by authors named "S Yu Morgunov"

The spread of African swine fever virus (ASFV) has led to major economic losses to pork worldwide. In Russia, there are no developed or registered vaccines against ASFV genotype II, which is associated with numerous ASFV outbreaks in populations of domestic pigs and wild boars in the country. We introduced deletions of the six MGF360 and MGF505 genes of the ASFV virulent Stavropol_01/08 strain, isolated in Russia in 2008.

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Article Synopsis
  • African swine fever (ASF) is a serious global threat to the swine industry, caused by the African swine fever virus (ASFV), with current vaccines based on modified strains of the virus.
  • Researchers studied the impact of deleting a specific gene from the virulent Stavropol_01/08 strain and found that this modification did not fully attenuate the virus, resulting in a high mortality rate in infected animals.
  • The study also established that techniques like immunofluorescence (IFA) and Western blotting can effectively detect antibodies against ASFV using the p11.5 protein as a marker, suggesting its potential use in vaccine development.
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African swine fever virus (ASFV) is an extremely genetically and phenotypically heterogeneous pathogen. Previously, we have demonstrated that experimental inoculation of pigs with an attenuated strain, Katanga-350 (genotype I, seroimmunotype I) (ASFV-Katanga-350), can induce protective immunity in 80% of European domestic pigs against the homologous virulent European strain Lisbon-57. At least 50% of the surviving pigs received protection from subsequent intramuscular infection with a heterologous virulent strain, Stavropol 01/08 (genotype II, seroimmunotype VIII) (ASFV-Stavropol 01/08).

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The African swine fever virus (ASFV) is the cause of a recent pandemic that is threatening the global pig industry. The virus infects domestic and wild pigs and manifests with a variety of clinical symptoms, depending on the strain. No commercial vaccine is currently available to protect animals from this virus, but some attenuated and recombinant live vaccine candidates might be effective against the disease.

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