Heinen P P, van Nieuwstadt A P, de Boer-Luijtze E A, Bianchi A T
Department of Mammalian Virology, Institute for Animal Science and Health (ID-Lelystad BV), P.O. Box 65, 8200 AB, Lelystad, The Netherlands.
Vet Immunol Immunopathol. 2001 Sep 28;82(1-2):39-56. doi: 10.1016/s0165-2427(01)00342-7.
Antigenic drift of swine influenza A (H3N2) viruses away from the human A/Port Chalmers/1/73 (H3N2) strain, used in current commercial swine influenza vaccines, has been demonstrated in The Netherlands and Belgium. Therefore, replacement of this human strain by a more recent swine H3N2 isolate has to be considered. In this study, the efficacy of a current commercial swine influenza vaccine to protect pigs against a recent Dutch field strain (A/Sw/Oedenrode/96) was assessed. To evaluate the level of protection induced by the vaccine it was compared with the optimal protection induced by a previous homologous infection. Development of fever, virus excretion, and viral transmission to unchallenged group mates were determined to evaluate protection. The vaccine appeared efficacious in the experiment because it was able to prevent fever and virus transmission to the unchallenged group mates. Nevertheless, the protection conferred by the vaccine was sub-optimal because vaccinated pigs excreted influenza virus for a short period of time after challenge, whereas naturally immune pigs appeared completely protected. The immune response was monitored, to investigate why the vaccine conferred a sub-optimal protection. The haemagglutination inhibiting and virus neutralising antibody responses in sera, the nucleoprotein-specific IgM, IgG, and IgA antibody responses in sera and nasal secretions and the influenza-specific lymphoproliferation responses in the blood were studied. Vaccinated pigs developed the same or higher serum haemagglutination inhibiting, virus neutralising, and nucleoprotein-specific IgG antibody titres as infected pigs but lower nasal IgA titres and lymphoproliferation responses. The lower mucosal and cell-mediated immune responses may explain why protection after vaccination was sub-optimal.
在荷兰和比利时已证实,甲型(H3N2)猪流感病毒出现了抗原漂移,偏离了当前商业猪流感疫苗中所使用的人类A/克赖斯特彻奇港/1/73(H3N2)毒株。因此,必须考虑用更新的猪H3N2分离株取代这种人类毒株。在本研究中,评估了一种当前商业猪流感疫苗保护猪抵御近期荷兰田间毒株(A/猪/奥登罗德/96)的效力。为了评估该疫苗诱导的保护水平,将其与先前同源感染诱导的最佳保护进行了比较。通过测定发热情况、病毒排泄以及向未受攻击的同组猪的病毒传播来评估保护效果。该疫苗在实验中似乎是有效的,因为它能够预防发热以及向未受攻击的同组猪的病毒传播。然而,该疫苗提供的保护并非最佳,因为接种疫苗的猪在受到攻击后短时间内仍排泄流感病毒,而自然免疫的猪似乎得到了完全保护。监测了免疫反应,以探究疫苗提供次优保护的原因。研究了血清中的血凝抑制和病毒中和抗体反应、血清及鼻分泌物中的核蛋白特异性IgM、IgG和IgA抗体反应以及血液中的流感特异性淋巴细胞增殖反应。接种疫苗的猪产生的血清血凝抑制、病毒中和以及核蛋白特异性IgG抗体效价与感染猪相同或更高,但鼻IgA效价和淋巴细胞增殖反应较低。较低的黏膜和细胞介导免疫反应可能解释了接种疫苗后保护效果次优的原因。