Abstract

BackgroundVesicular stomatitis (VS) is an acute, highly contagious and economically important zoonotic disease caused by the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). There is a need for effective and safe stable recombinant vaccine for the control of the disease. The human type 5 replication-defective adenovirus expression vector is a good way to construct recombinant vaccines.ResultsThree recombinant adenoviruses (rAd) were successfully constructed that expressed the VSV Indiana serotype glycoprotein (VSV-IN-G), VSV New Jersey serotype glycoprotein (VSV-NJ-G), and the G fusion protein (both serotypes of G [VSV-IN-G-NJ-G]) with potentiality to induce protective immunity. G proteins were successfully expressed with good immunogenicity. The rAds could induce the production of VSV antibodies in mice, and VSV neutralizing antibodies in goats, respectively. The neutralizing antibody titers could reach 1:32 in mice and 1:64 in goats. The rAds induced strong lymphocyte proliferation in mice and goats, which was significantly higher compared to the negative control groups.ConclusionsThe three rAds constructed in the study expressed VSV-G proteins and induced both humoral and cellular immune responses in mice and goats. These results lay the foundation for further studies on the use of rAds in vaccines expressing VSV-G.

Highlights

  • Vesicular stomatitis (VS) is an acute, highly contagious and economically important zoonotic disease caused by the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)

  • We evaluated the immunogenicity of these recombinant adenoviruses (rAd) vectors expressing vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein (VSV-G) in mice and goats

  • Generation and identification of recombinant adenovirus The three rAds named rAd-IN, rAd-NJ, rAd-IN-NJ were replicated in AAV-293 cells

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Summary

Introduction

Vesicular stomatitis (VS) is an acute, highly contagious and economically important zoonotic disease caused by the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). There is a need for effective and safe stable recombinant vaccine for the control of the disease. The etiology of the disease is vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), Xue et al BMC Veterinary Research (2021) 17:36 neutralizing antibodies in infected animals. These virus can be identified by neutralization and complement fixation tests [7, 8]. Further efforts are still needed in developing new vaccines [10, 11, 14]

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