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Longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age

Human and bovine respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV and BRSV) are closely genetically related and cause respiratory disease in their respective host. Whereas HRSV vaccines are still under development, a multitude of BRSV vaccines are used to reduce clinical signs. To enable the design of vaccination...

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Autores principales: Hägglund, Sara, Näslund, Katarina, Svensson, Anna, Lefverman, Cecilia, Enül, Hakan, Pascal, Leonore, Siltenius, Jari, Holzhauer, Menno, Delabouglise, Alexis, Österberg, Julia, Alvåsen, Karin, Olsson, Ulf, Eléouët, Jean-François, Riffault, Sabine, Taylor, Geraldine, Rodriguez, María Jose, Garcia Duran, Marga, Valarcher, Jean François
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9481050/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36112582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274332
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author Hägglund, Sara
Näslund, Katarina
Svensson, Anna
Lefverman, Cecilia
Enül, Hakan
Pascal, Leonore
Siltenius, Jari
Holzhauer, Menno
Delabouglise, Alexis
Österberg, Julia
Alvåsen, Karin
Olsson, Ulf
Eléouët, Jean-François
Riffault, Sabine
Taylor, Geraldine
Rodriguez, María Jose
Garcia Duran, Marga
Valarcher, Jean François
author_facet Hägglund, Sara
Näslund, Katarina
Svensson, Anna
Lefverman, Cecilia
Enül, Hakan
Pascal, Leonore
Siltenius, Jari
Holzhauer, Menno
Delabouglise, Alexis
Österberg, Julia
Alvåsen, Karin
Olsson, Ulf
Eléouët, Jean-François
Riffault, Sabine
Taylor, Geraldine
Rodriguez, María Jose
Garcia Duran, Marga
Valarcher, Jean François
author_sort Hägglund, Sara
collection PubMed
description Human and bovine respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV and BRSV) are closely genetically related and cause respiratory disease in their respective host. Whereas HRSV vaccines are still under development, a multitude of BRSV vaccines are used to reduce clinical signs. To enable the design of vaccination protocols to entirely stop virus circulation, we aimed to investigate the duration, character and efficacy of the immune responses induced by natural infections. The systemic humoral immunity was monitored every two months during two years in 33 dairy cattle in different age cohorts following a natural BRSV outbreak, and again in selected individuals before and after a second outbreak, four years later. Local humoral and systemic cellular responses were also monitored, although less extensively. Based on clinical observations and economic losses linked to decreased milk production, the outbreaks were classified as moderate. Following the first outbreak, most but not all animals developed neutralising antibody responses, BRSV-specific IgG1, IgG2 and HRSV F- and HRSV N-reactive responses that lasted at least two years, and in some cases at least four years. In contrast, no systemic T cell responses were detected and only weak IgA responses were detected in some animals. Seronegative sentinels remained negative, inferring that no new infections occurred between the outbreaks. During the second outbreak, reinfections with clinical signs and virus shedding occurred, but the signs were milder, and the virus shedding was significantly lower than in naïve animals. Whereas the primary infection induced similar antibody titres against the prefusion and the post fusion form of the BRSV F protein, memory responses were significantly stronger against prefusion F. In conclusion, even if natural infections induce a long-lasting immunity, it would probably be necessary to boost memory responses between outbreaks, to stop the circulation of the virus and limit the potential role of previously infected adult cattle in the chain of BRSV transmission.
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spelling pubmed-94810502022-09-17 Longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age Hägglund, Sara Näslund, Katarina Svensson, Anna Lefverman, Cecilia Enül, Hakan Pascal, Leonore Siltenius, Jari Holzhauer, Menno Delabouglise, Alexis Österberg, Julia Alvåsen, Karin Olsson, Ulf Eléouët, Jean-François Riffault, Sabine Taylor, Geraldine Rodriguez, María Jose Garcia Duran, Marga Valarcher, Jean François PLoS One Research Article Human and bovine respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV and BRSV) are closely genetically related and cause respiratory disease in their respective host. Whereas HRSV vaccines are still under development, a multitude of BRSV vaccines are used to reduce clinical signs. To enable the design of vaccination protocols to entirely stop virus circulation, we aimed to investigate the duration, character and efficacy of the immune responses induced by natural infections. The systemic humoral immunity was monitored every two months during two years in 33 dairy cattle in different age cohorts following a natural BRSV outbreak, and again in selected individuals before and after a second outbreak, four years later. Local humoral and systemic cellular responses were also monitored, although less extensively. Based on clinical observations and economic losses linked to decreased milk production, the outbreaks were classified as moderate. Following the first outbreak, most but not all animals developed neutralising antibody responses, BRSV-specific IgG1, IgG2 and HRSV F- and HRSV N-reactive responses that lasted at least two years, and in some cases at least four years. In contrast, no systemic T cell responses were detected and only weak IgA responses were detected in some animals. Seronegative sentinels remained negative, inferring that no new infections occurred between the outbreaks. During the second outbreak, reinfections with clinical signs and virus shedding occurred, but the signs were milder, and the virus shedding was significantly lower than in naïve animals. Whereas the primary infection induced similar antibody titres against the prefusion and the post fusion form of the BRSV F protein, memory responses were significantly stronger against prefusion F. In conclusion, even if natural infections induce a long-lasting immunity, it would probably be necessary to boost memory responses between outbreaks, to stop the circulation of the virus and limit the potential role of previously infected adult cattle in the chain of BRSV transmission. Public Library of Science 2022-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9481050/ /pubmed/36112582 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274332 Text en © 2022 Hägglund et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://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
Hägglund, Sara
Näslund, Katarina
Svensson, Anna
Lefverman, Cecilia
Enül, Hakan
Pascal, Leonore
Siltenius, Jari
Holzhauer, Menno
Delabouglise, Alexis
Österberg, Julia
Alvåsen, Karin
Olsson, Ulf
Eléouët, Jean-François
Riffault, Sabine
Taylor, Geraldine
Rodriguez, María Jose
Garcia Duran, Marga
Valarcher, Jean François
Longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age
title Longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age
title_full Longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age
title_fullStr Longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age
title_full_unstemmed Longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age
title_short Longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age
title_sort longitudinal study of the immune response and memory following natural bovine respiratory syncytial virus infections in cattle of different age
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9481050/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36112582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274332
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