Braaen Stine, Wessel Øystein, Bjørgen Håvard, Rimstad Espen
Unit of Virology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, 1433 Ås, Norway.
Unit of Anatomy, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, 1433 Ås, Norway.
Vaccines (Basel). 2025 Feb 15;13(2):190. doi: 10.3390/vaccines13020190.
: Pancreas disease (PD) is a serious disease in European salmonid aquaculture caused by salmonid alphavirus (SAV), of which six genotypes (SAV1-6) have been described. The use of inactivated virus and DNA PD vaccines is common in marine salmonid aquaculture and has contributed to a reduction of the occurrence of disease; however, outbreaks are still frequent. In this study, we compared the long-term protection after immunization of Atlantic salmon () with three different clones of attenuated infectious SAV3. The clones were made by site-directed mutagenesis targeting the glycoprotein E2 to disrupt the viral attachment and/or nuclear localization signal (NLS) of the capsid protein to disrupt the viral suppression of cellular nuclear-cytosol trafficking. The resulting clones (Clones 1-3) were evaluated after injection of Atlantic salmon for infection dynamics, genetic stability, transmission, and protection against a subsequent SAV3 challenge. : Attenuated clones demonstrated reduced virulence, as indicated by lower viral RNA loads, diminished transmission to cohabitant fish, and minimal clinical symptoms compared to the virulent wild-type virus. The clones mutated in both capsid and E2 exhibited the most attenuation, observed as rapid clearing of the infection and showing little transmission, while the clone with glycoprotein E2 mutations displayed greater residual virulence but provided stronger protection, seen as reduced viral loads upon subsequent challenge with SAV3. Despite their attenuation, all viral clones caused significant reductions in weight gain. Despite promising attenuation and protection, this study highlights the trade-offs between virulence and immunogenicity in live vaccine design. Concerns over environmental risks, such as the shedding of genetically modified virus, necessitate further evaluation. Future efforts should optimize vaccine candidates to balance attenuation, immunogenicity, and minimal side effects.
胰腺疾病(PD)是欧洲鲑鱼养殖中的一种严重疾病,由鲑鱼α病毒(SAV)引起,已描述了六种基因型(SAV1 - 6)。灭活病毒和DNA PD疫苗在海水鲑鱼养殖中常用,有助于减少疾病的发生;然而,疫情仍频繁发生。在本研究中,我们比较了用三种不同的减毒感染性SAV3克隆免疫大西洋鲑()后的长期保护效果。这些克隆是通过定点诱变制备的,靶向糖蛋白E2以破坏病毒附着和/或衣壳蛋白的核定位信号(NLS),从而破坏病毒对细胞核 - 细胞质运输的抑制。在注射大西洋鲑后,对所得克隆(克隆1 - 3)进行感染动态、遗传稳定性、传播以及针对后续SAV3攻击的保护作用评估。减毒克隆表现出毒力降低,表现为病毒RNA载量较低、向同居鱼类的传播减少以及与强毒野生型病毒相比临床症状轻微。在衣壳和E2中均发生突变的克隆表现出最大程度的减毒,表现为感染快速清除且传播极少,而糖蛋白E2发生突变的克隆表现出更大的残余毒力,但提供了更强的保护,表现为在随后用SAV3攻击时病毒载量降低。尽管它们减毒,但所有病毒克隆均导致体重增加显著减少。尽管减毒和保护效果良好,但本研究突出了活疫苗设计中毒力和免疫原性之间的权衡。对环境风险的担忧,如转基因病毒的释放,需要进一步评估。未来的努力应优化候选疫苗,以平衡减毒、免疫原性和最小副作用。