Abstract

In presence of low or high levels of rotavirus-specific maternal antibodies, the ability of newborn mice to respond to immunization with rotavirus RF 8*-2/6/7 VLPs, was evaluated. After parenteral vaccination, 100% of offspring born to low-antibody-titer dams developed rotavirus-specific IgG antibodies (n=7). In contrast, only 25% of offsprings born to high-antibody-titer dams responded to parenteral immunization (n=12). When comparing parenteral versus oral immunization in offspring to low-antibody-titer dams only 45% responded after oral immunization (n=6). In conclusion, the response to parenteral immunization was not hampered by the presence of low levels of maternal antibodies induced by a natural infection while oral immunization was impaired. However, high levels of maternal antibodies impaired the response to parenteral immunization.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call