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Expression of VP7, a Bluetongue Virus Group Specific Antigen by Viral Vectors: Analysis of the Induced Immune Responses and Evaluation of Protective Potential in Sheep.

Authors :
Bouet-Cararo, Coraline
Contreras, Vanessa
Caruso, Agathe
Top, Sokunthea
Szelechowski, Marion
Bergeron, Corinne
Viarouge, Cyril
Desprat, Alexandra
Relmy, Anthony
Guibert, Jean-Michel
Dubois, Eric
Thiery, Richard
Bréard, Emmanuel
Bertagnoli, Stephane
Richardson, Jennifer
Foucras, Gilles
Meyer, Gilles
Schwartz-Cornil, Isabelle
Zientara, Stephan
Klonjkowski, Bernard
Source :
PLoS ONE. Nov2014, Vol. 9 Issue 11, p1-9. 9p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Bluetongue virus (BTV) is an economically important Orbivirus transmitted by biting midges to domestic and wild ruminants. The need for new vaccines has been highlighted by the occurrence of repeated outbreaks caused by different BTV serotypes since 1998. The major group-reactive antigen of BTV, VP7, is conserved in the 26 serotypes described so far, and its role in the induction of protective immunity has been proposed. Viral-based vectors as antigen delivery systems display considerable promise as veterinary vaccine candidates. In this paper we have evaluated the capacity of the BTV-2 serotype VP7 core protein expressed by either a non-replicative canine adenovirus type 2 (Cav-VP7 R0) or a leporipoxvirus (SG33-VP7), to induce immune responses in sheep. Humoral responses were elicited against VP7 in almost all animals that received the recombinant vectors. Both Cav-VP7 R0 and SG33-VP7 stimulated an antigen-specific CD4+ response and Cav-VP7 R0 stimulated substantial proliferation of antigen-specific CD8+ lymphocytes. Encouraged by the results obtained with the Cav-VP7 R0 vaccine vector, immunized animals were challenged with either the homologous BTV-2 or the heterologous BTV-8 serotype and viral burden in plasma was followed by real-time RT-PCR. The immune responses triggered by Cav-VP7 R0 were insufficient to afford protective immunity against BTV infection, despite partial protection obtained against homologous challenge. This work underscores the need to further characterize the role of BTV proteins in cross-protective immunity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
9
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
99732541
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111605