Abstract

Infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) is an upper respiratory tract disease of chickens that is caused by infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV), an alphaherpesvirus. This disease causes significant economic loses in poultry industries worldwide. Despite widespread use of commercial live attenuated vaccines, many poultry industries continue to experience outbreaks of disease caused by ILTV. Efforts to improve the control of this disease have resulted in the generation of new vaccine candidates, including ILTV mutants deficient in virulence factors. A glycoprotein G deletion mutant vaccine strain of ILTV (ΔgG ILTV), recently licenced as Vaxsafe ILT (Bioproperties Pty Ltd), has been extensively characterised in vitro and in vivo, but the minimum effective dose required to protect inoculated animals has not been determined. This study performed a vaccination and challenge experiment to determine the minimum dose of ΔgG ILTV that, when delivered by eye-drop to seven-day-old specific pathogen-free chickens, would protect the birds from a robust challenge with a virulent field strain of virus (class 9 ILTV). A dose of 103.8 plaque forming units was the lowest dose capable of providing a high level of protection against challenge, as measured by clinical signs of disease, tracheal pathology and virus replication after challenge. This study has shown that the ΔgG ILTV vaccine strain is capable of inducing a high level of protection against a virulent field virus at a commercially feasible dose. These results lay the foundations upon which a commercial vaccine can be developed, thereby offering the potential to provide producers with another important tool to help control ILTV.

Highlights

  • Infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) is an alphaherpesvirus that causes acute upper respiratory tract disease in chickens and has significant economic importance for poultry industries throughout the world [1]

  • There were no significant differences between the group that received the highest dose of vaccine (105.0 plaque forming units (PFU)) and the negative control group at any time point for any of these parameters

  • This was true for the group that received the second highest dose of vaccine (103.8 PFU), when the scores were summed to yield cumulative scores, this group had a cumulative conjunctivitis score that was significantly higher than the cumulative score for the negative control group (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) is an alphaherpesvirus that causes acute upper respiratory tract disease in chickens and has significant economic importance for poultry industries throughout the world [1]. Minimum protective dose of a gG-deficient ILTV vaccine external funding received for this study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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