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Cattle Immunized with a Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Formulation Exhibits a Trend towards Protection against Histophilus somni Bacterial Challenge

Histophilosis, a mucosal and septicemic infection of cattle is caused by the Gram negative pathogen Histophilus somni (H. somni). As existing vaccines against H. somni infection have shown to be of limited efficacy, we used a reverse vaccinology approach to identify new vaccine candidates. Three gro...

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Autores principales: Madampage, Claudia Avis, Wilson, Don, Townsend, Hugh, Crockford, Gordon, Rawlyk, Neil, Dent, Donna, Evans, Brock, Van Donkersgoed, Joyce, Dorin, Craig, Potter, Andrew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4976985/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27501390
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159070
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author Madampage, Claudia Avis
Wilson, Don
Townsend, Hugh
Crockford, Gordon
Rawlyk, Neil
Dent, Donna
Evans, Brock
Van Donkersgoed, Joyce
Dorin, Craig
Potter, Andrew
author_facet Madampage, Claudia Avis
Wilson, Don
Townsend, Hugh
Crockford, Gordon
Rawlyk, Neil
Dent, Donna
Evans, Brock
Van Donkersgoed, Joyce
Dorin, Craig
Potter, Andrew
author_sort Madampage, Claudia Avis
collection PubMed
description Histophilosis, a mucosal and septicemic infection of cattle is caused by the Gram negative pathogen Histophilus somni (H. somni). As existing vaccines against H. somni infection have shown to be of limited efficacy, we used a reverse vaccinology approach to identify new vaccine candidates. Three groups (B, C, D) of cattle were immunized with subunit vaccines and a control group (group A) was vaccinated with adjuvant alone. All four groups were challenged with H. somni. The results demonstrate that there was no significant difference in clinical signs, joint lesions, weight change or rectal temperature between any of the vaccinated groups (B,C,D) vs the control group A. However, the trend to protection was greatest for group C vaccinates. The group C vaccine was a pool of six recombinant proteins. Serum antibody responses determined using ELISA showed significantly higher titers for group C, with P values ranging from < 0.0148 to < 0.0002, than group A. Even though serum antibody titers in group B (5 out of 6 antigens) and group D were significantly higher compared to group A, they exerted less of a trend towards protection. In conclusion, the vaccine used in group C exhibits a trend towards protective immunity in cattle and would be a good candidate for further analysis to determine which proteins were responsible for the trend towards protection.
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spelling pubmed-49769852016-08-25 Cattle Immunized with a Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Formulation Exhibits a Trend towards Protection against Histophilus somni Bacterial Challenge Madampage, Claudia Avis Wilson, Don Townsend, Hugh Crockford, Gordon Rawlyk, Neil Dent, Donna Evans, Brock Van Donkersgoed, Joyce Dorin, Craig Potter, Andrew PLoS One Research Article Histophilosis, a mucosal and septicemic infection of cattle is caused by the Gram negative pathogen Histophilus somni (H. somni). As existing vaccines against H. somni infection have shown to be of limited efficacy, we used a reverse vaccinology approach to identify new vaccine candidates. Three groups (B, C, D) of cattle were immunized with subunit vaccines and a control group (group A) was vaccinated with adjuvant alone. All four groups were challenged with H. somni. The results demonstrate that there was no significant difference in clinical signs, joint lesions, weight change or rectal temperature between any of the vaccinated groups (B,C,D) vs the control group A. However, the trend to protection was greatest for group C vaccinates. The group C vaccine was a pool of six recombinant proteins. Serum antibody responses determined using ELISA showed significantly higher titers for group C, with P values ranging from < 0.0148 to < 0.0002, than group A. Even though serum antibody titers in group B (5 out of 6 antigens) and group D were significantly higher compared to group A, they exerted less of a trend towards protection. In conclusion, the vaccine used in group C exhibits a trend towards protective immunity in cattle and would be a good candidate for further analysis to determine which proteins were responsible for the trend towards protection. Public Library of Science 2016-08-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4976985/ /pubmed/27501390 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159070 Text en © 2016 Madampage et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Madampage, Claudia Avis
Wilson, Don
Townsend, Hugh
Crockford, Gordon
Rawlyk, Neil
Dent, Donna
Evans, Brock
Van Donkersgoed, Joyce
Dorin, Craig
Potter, Andrew
Cattle Immunized with a Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Formulation Exhibits a Trend towards Protection against Histophilus somni Bacterial Challenge
title Cattle Immunized with a Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Formulation Exhibits a Trend towards Protection against Histophilus somni Bacterial Challenge
title_full Cattle Immunized with a Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Formulation Exhibits a Trend towards Protection against Histophilus somni Bacterial Challenge
title_fullStr Cattle Immunized with a Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Formulation Exhibits a Trend towards Protection against Histophilus somni Bacterial Challenge
title_full_unstemmed Cattle Immunized with a Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Formulation Exhibits a Trend towards Protection against Histophilus somni Bacterial Challenge
title_short Cattle Immunized with a Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Formulation Exhibits a Trend towards Protection against Histophilus somni Bacterial Challenge
title_sort cattle immunized with a recombinant subunit vaccine formulation exhibits a trend towards protection against histophilus somni bacterial challenge
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4976985/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27501390
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159070
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