Abstract

Attenuated Salmonella-mediated vaccine constructs were designed by employing selected discontinuous immunodominant epitopes of LatA, FliC, and PAL antigens of Lawsonia intracellularis to create vaccines against porcine proliferative enteropathy (PPE). Whole protein sequences were subjected to in silico prediction of dominant epitopes, the stability of fusions, and hydropathicity and to ensure that the fused epitopes were feasible for expression in a Salmonella system. Two fusion constructs, one comprising LatA epitopes and the other FliC-PAL-FliC epitopes, were built into a prokaryotic constitutive expression system and transformed into the auxotrophic Salmonella host strain JOL1800. Epitope selection eliminated the majority of less immunodominant regions of target proteins and resulted in an efficient secretion platform that induced significant protective responses. Overall, our results demonstrated that the Salmonella-mediated LI- multi-epitope vaccines elicited significant humoral and cellular immune responses. Additionally, the challenge study suggested that the vaccinated mice were protected against experimental Lawsonia intracellularis infection. Based on the outcomes of the study, Salmonella-mediated LI- multi-epitope vaccines have the potential to prevent PPE.

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