Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8751459 | Virology | 2018 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The role of passively transferred sera in the protection against aerogenous foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) virus infection in cattle was evaluated using vaccine-induced immune serum preparations obtained at 7 and 26 days post-vaccination (dpv). We showed that circulating antibodies were sufficient to prevent disease generalization after oronasal infection in animals passively transferred with 26-dpv serum but not with the 7-dpv serum. Conversely, conventional FMD vaccination provided clinical protection at 7 dpv, promoting fast and robust antibody responses upon challenge and even though antibody titers were similar to those found in animals passively immunized with 7-dpv serum. These results demonstrate that presence of antigen-specific antibodies is critical to prevent the dissemination of the virus within the animal. Conventional FMD vaccination additionally promoted the deployment of rapid, high titer and isotype-switched antibody responses at systemic and mucosal levels after infection, thus conferring protection even in the presence of low pre-challenge antibody titers.
Keywords
ASCFMDVNaBFMDMNCMRLHRPOIEDPVVNTPBStblLPBEDPIAUCNeutralizing antibodiesProtective immunityFoot-and-mouth diseaseanalysis of varianceANOVAvirus neutralizationRoom temperaturedays post-infectiondays post-vaccinationWorld Organisation for Animal Healthmononuclear cellPhosphate-buffered salineFoot and mouth diseasearea under the curveplaque-forming unitsVaccinesFoot and mouth disease virusHorseradish peroxidasepfuoptical densityCattle
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Authors
Florencia Barrionuevo, Sebastián Di Giacomo, Danilo Bucafusco, Andrea Ayude, Juan Schammas, M. Cruz Miraglia, Alejandra Capozzo, Manuel V. Borca, Mariano Perez-Filgueira,