The Roslin Institute and The Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland, UK.
Department of Veterinary Diagnostic and Production Animal Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA.
Vet Res. 2017 Oct 26;48(1):69. doi: 10.1186/s13567-017-0472-z.
Porcine epidemic diarrhea virus strains from the G1b cluster are considered less pathogenic compared to the G2b cluster. The aim of this study was to compare the ability of G1b-based live virus exposure against use of a commercial G2b-based inactivated vaccine to protect growing pigs against G2b challenge. Thirty-nine PEDV naïve pigs were randomly divided into five groups: EXP-IM-1b (intramuscular G1b exposure; G2b challenge), EXP-ORAL-1b (oral G1b exposure; G2b challenge), VAC-IM-2b (intramuscular commercial inactivated G2b vaccination; G2b challenge), POS-CONTROL (sham-vaccination; G2b challenge) and NEG-CONTROL (sham-vaccination; sham-challenge). Pigs were vaccinated/exposed at 3 weeks of age (day post-vaccination 0, dpv 0), VAC-IM-2b pigs were revaccinated at dpv 14, and the pigs were challenged at dpv 28. Among all groups, VAC-IM-2b pigs had significantly higher anti-PEDV IgG levels on dpv 21 and 28 while EXP-ORAL-1b pigs had significantly higher anti-PEDV IgA levels on dpv 14, 21, 28 and 35. EXP-ORAL-1b also had detectable IgA in feces. Intramuscular PEDV exposure did not result in a detectable antibody response in EXP-IM-1b pigs. The fecal PEDV RNA levels in VAC-IM-2b pigs were significantly lower 5-7 days after challenge compared to the POS-CONTROL group. Under the study conditions a commercial inactivated G2b-based vaccine protected pigs against G2b challenge, as evidenced by reduction of PEDV RNA in feces for 3-4 logs during peak shedding and a shorter viral shedding duration. The oral, but not the intramuscular, experimental G1b-based live virus exposure induced a high anti-PEDV IgA response prior to challenge, which apparently did not impact PEDV shedding compared to POS-CONTROL pigs.
与 G2b 聚类相比,来自 G1b 聚类的猪流行性腹泻病毒株被认为致病性较低。本研究旨在比较基于 G1b 的活病毒暴露与使用商业 G2b 灭活疫苗对生长猪的保护作用,以抵抗 G2b 挑战。39 头 PEDV 初免猪被随机分为五组:EXP-IM-1b(肌肉内 G1b 暴露;G2b 挑战)、EXP-ORAL-1b(口服 G1b 暴露;G2b 挑战)、VAC-IM-2b(肌肉内商业灭活 G2b 疫苗接种;G2b 挑战)、POS-CONTROL(假疫苗接种;G2b 挑战)和 NEG-CONTROL(假疫苗接种;假挑战)。猪在 3 周龄(疫苗接种后第 0 天,dpv 0)时接种/暴露,VAC-IM-2b 猪在 dpv 14 时再次接种,猪在 dpv 28 时接受挑战。在所有组中,VAC-IM-2b 猪在 dpv 21 和 28 时的抗 PEDV IgG 水平显著升高,而 EXP-ORAL-1b 猪在 dpv 14、21、28 和 35 时的抗 PEDV IgA 水平显著升高。EXP-ORAL-1b 粪便中也检测到 IgA。肌肉内 PEDV 暴露并未导致 EXP-IM-1b 猪产生可检测的抗体反应。与 POS-CONTROL 组相比,VAC-IM-2b 猪在挑战后 5-7 天粪便中的 PEDV RNA 水平显著降低。在研究条件下,一种商业的 G2b 灭活疫苗可保护猪免受 G2b 挑战,粪便中 PEDV RNA 减少 3-4 个对数级,病毒脱落时间缩短。口服但不是肌肉内的实验性 G1b 基于活病毒暴露在挑战前诱导了高水平的抗 PEDV IgA 反应,但与 POS-CONTROL 猪相比,这似乎并没有影响 PEDV 脱落。