Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10969519 | Vaccine | 2010 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Subunit vaccines are a suitable alternative for the control of classical swine fever. However, such vaccines have as the main drawback the relatively long period of time required to induce a protective response, which hampers their use under outbreak conditions. In this work, type I interferon is used as an immunostimulating molecule in order to increase the immunogenicity of a vaccine candidate based on the E2-CSFV antigen produced in goat milk. Pigs vaccinated with E2-CSFV antigen co-formulated with recombinant human alpha interferon were protected against clinical signs and viremia as early as 7 days post-vaccination. It was also demonstrated that interferon stimulates a response of specific anti-CSFV neutralizing antibodies. The present work constitutes the first report of a subunit vaccine able to confer complete protection by the end of the first week after vaccination. These results suggest that the E2-CSFV antigen combined with type I interferons could be potentially used under outbreak conditions to stop CSFV spread and for eradication programs in CSF enzootic areas.
Keywords
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Immunology
Authors
Jorge R. Toledo, Maritza Barrera, Omar Farnós, Silvia Gómez, MarÃa P. RodrÃguez, Felix Aguero, Valeska Ormazabal, Natalie C. Parra, Lester Suárez, Oliberto Sánchez,