AI Article Synopsis

  • Highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAIV) H5N1 affect domestic poultry and pose a risk to human health, as they continue to evolve and complicate diagnosis and control efforts.
  • Researchers created a vaccine using modified vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) vectors that express the H5 hemagglutinin protein without the virus's G protein for better biosafety.
  • The vaccine proved effective in chickens, providing full protection against H5N1, enhancing immune responses, and allowing differentiation between infected and vaccinated birds, potentially aiding in the control of avian influenza in poultry.

Article Abstract

Highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAIV) of subtype H5N1 not only cause a devastating disease in domestic chickens and turkeys but also pose a continuous threat to public health. In some countries, H5N1 viruses continue to circulate and evolve into new clades and subclades. The rapid evolution of these viruses represents a problem for virus diagnosis and control. In this work, recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) vectors expressing HA of subtype H5 were generated. To comply with biosafety issues the G gene was deleted from the VSV genome. The resulting vaccine vector VSV*ΔG(HA) was propagated on helper cells providing the VSV G protein in trans. Vaccination of chickens with a single intramuscular dose of 2×10⁸ infectious replicon particles without adjuvant conferred complete protection from lethal H5N1 infection. Subsequent application of the same vaccine strongly boosted the humoral immune response and completely prevented shedding of challenge virus and transmission to sentinel birds. The vaccine allowed serological differentiation of infected from vaccinated animals (DIVA) by employing a commercially available ELISA. Immunized chickens produced antibodies with neutralizing activity against multiple H5 viruses representing clades 1, 2.2, 2.5, and low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses (classical clade). Studies using chimeric H1/H5 hemagglutinins showed that the neutralizing activity was predominantly directed against the globular head domain. In summary, these results suggest that VSV replicon particles are safe and potent DIVA vaccines that may help to control avian influenza viruses in domestic poultry.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3677925PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0066059PLOS

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