Objective: To evaluate the effect of various routes of administration and number of doses of 3 commercially produced rabies vaccines on serum antibody responses and protection in mice challenged by intracerebral injection with fixed-strain rabies virus.
Animals: 2,213 mice.
Procedure: Inactivated, adjuvanted rabies vaccines were administered to mice in either 2, 1, or 0 (control) doses via IP, IM, and SC routes, and mice were challenged intracerebrally with fixed-strain rabies virus.
Results: Vaccination route and dose number significantly influenced serum antibody responses and protection from rabies virus challenge, independent of vaccine strain origin and mouse strain, although mouse age significantly affected results. Extended challenge studies revealed that IM vaccination of mice resulted in the highest serum neutralizing antibody responses and protection levels equivalent to IP vaccination. Even multiple doses administered SC (a vaccination route used in dogs) resulted in poor serum anti-rabies neutralizing antibody responses in mice and were far less protective than other routes.
Conclusions And Clinical Relevance: Findings suggest possible improvements for the current rabies vaccine potency test in mice by using 1 dose, the IM route, and a delayed time of challenge. These modifications would more closely model vaccination practices in target species and yield more accurate information regarding primary immunogenicity of a vaccine.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2460/ajvr.2003.64.491 | DOI Listing |
Bull Math Biol
January 2025
Information Technology Laboratory, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, Maryland, 20899, USA.
Immune events such as infection, vaccination, and a combination of the two result in distinct time-dependent antibody responses in affected individuals. These responses and event prevalence combine non-trivially to govern antibody levels sampled from a population. Time-dependence and disease prevalence pose considerable modeling challenges that need to be addressed to provide a rigorous mathematical underpinning of the underlying biology.
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December 2024
Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
Background: Anti-amyloid-β (Aβ) immunotherapy trials have shown amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA) as the most common and serious adverse events linked to pathological changes in cerebral vasculature. Nevertheless, the mechanisms underlying how amyloid immunotherapy triggers vascular damage, increases vascular permeability, and results in microhemorrhages remains unclear. Notably, activation of perivascular macrophages and infiltration of peripheral immune cells have been implicated in regulating cerebrovascular damage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
Tel Aviv university, Tel Aviv, Israel, Israel.
Background: Amyloid filaments formation is a complex kinetic and thermodynamic process. The dependence of peptide polymerization on peptide-peptide interactions to form a β-pleated sheet fibrils and the stimulatory influence of other proteins on the reaction suggest that amyloid formation may be subject to modulation METHOD: In vitro formation of β-amyloid was induced by incubation of an aqueous solution of AβP (10 mg/ml) for 7 days at 37°C. The extent of β-amyloid formation and disaggregation were monitored using a panel of well characterized mAbs raised against soluble AβP fragments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
The University of Arizona - Tucson, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Background: Host commensal gut microbes are shown to be crucial for microglial maturation, and functions that involve innate immune responses to maintain brain homeostasis. Sex has a crucial role in the incidence of neurological diseases with females showing higher progression of AD compared with males. Transcriptomics has been a powerful tool for the characterization of microglial phenotypes however, there is a large gap in relating to their functional protein abundances.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
Background: Spatial disorientation is an early symptom of Alzheimer's disease (AD). The hippocampus creates a cognitive map, wherein cells form firing fields in specific locations within an environment, termed place cells. Critically, place cells remain stable across visits to an environment, but change their firing rate or field location in a different environment.
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