AI Article Synopsis

  • * A new inactivated vaccine (INMEVA) was tested on mice and sheep, showing promising results; it performed similarly to another inactivated vaccine (UMU) in terms of effectiveness in preventing reproductive issues in pregnant mouse models.
  • * In sheep, INMEVA demonstrated safety and a notable 75% reduction in reproductive disorders, along with decreased chlamydial shedding, indicating it provides adequate protection against OEA compared to unvaccinated animals.

Article Abstract

Ovine enzootic abortion (OEA), caused by , is an economically important disease in many countries. Inactivated vaccines have been used for many years as they induce immunity in sheep, although outbreaks of abortions have been described in vaccinated flocks. In addition, there is a commercially available live attenuated vaccine that provides good protective results. Recently however, reports question the attenuation of this vaccine and associate it with the appearance of outbreaks of OEA in vaccinated flocks. In the present study, a recently commercialized inactivated vaccine (INMEVA®; Laboratorios Hipra S.A., Amer, Spain) has been evaluated using mouse and sheep experimental models. In the mouse models (non-pregnant and pregnant models), the efficacy of INMEVA vaccine has been compared to an unvaccinated control group and to an experimental inactivated vaccine considered as a positive protection control (UMU vaccine). In the non- pregnant model, the UMU vaccine was more effective than the INMEVA vaccine regarding the impact on body weight or the presence of in the liver, but both vaccinated groups (UMU and INMEVA) had significantly lower in the liver compared to the control group. In the pregnant model in terms of reproductive failures, pups per mouse or the presence of in the liver or uterus, no significant differences were found between both vaccines, inducing protection compared to the control group. In the ovine pregnant model, where INMEVA vaccine was compared only to an unvaccinated group, the results indicate that this new commercial vaccine is safe and provides a suitable level of protection against an experimental challenge with . A 75% reduction in reproductive disorders, 55% reduction in animals with shedding on day of parturition/abortion, and a significant reduction of the average amount of chlamydial shedding from parturition/abortion over the next 21 days was observed, in relation to the infected control group. The results suggest that this vaccine is adequate for the control and prevention of OEA; however, future studies are necessary to elucidate the type of protective immune response that it induces.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7499823PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.00593DOI Listing

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