AI Article Synopsis

  • There's an urgent need for a broad-spectrum vaccine to combat various strains of swine influenza.
  • Pre-exposure to a specific live virus significantly reduced viral shedding in vaccinated pigs when exposed to different H1N1 and H3N2 strains.
  • Even though vaccinated pigs showed high levels of neutralizing antibodies against the vaccine strain, their response to challenge strains was suboptimal, suggesting other immune mechanisms may be involved in the protection observed.

Article Abstract

There is an urgent need to develop a broad-spectrum vaccine that can effectively prevent or eliminate the spread of co-circulating swine influenza virus strains in multiple lineages or subtypes. We describe here that pre-exposure with a live virus generated via a A/WSN/1933(H1N1) reverse genetics system resulted in a significant reduction of viral shedding from pigs exposed to either a swine H1N1 virus or a swine H3N2 virus. At 3-day post challenge (DPC), approximately 1 log and 1.5 logs reductions of viral shedding were observed in the swine H1N1- and H3N2-challenged vaccinated pigs when compared to unvaccinated animals. A further decline in viral load was observed at 5 DPC where viral shedding was decreased by greater than 3 logs in vaccinated pigs receiving either the H1N1 or H3N2 virus challenge. Although the sera of the vaccinated pigs contained high titers of neutralizing antibodies against the vaccine strain, measured by Hemagglutination Inhibition (HI) assay, only suboptimal HI titers of neutralizing antibody were detected in the post-challenge serum of the vaccinated animals using the challenge swine H1N1 virus. The substantial genetic and antigenic differences between the vaccine virus and the challenge viruses imply that the observed protection may be mediated by mechanisms other than neutralization by IgG, such as non-neutralizing antibody activities, mucosal immunity, or conserved T cell immunity, which warrants further investigation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6314213PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2018.11.008DOI Listing

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