Reference Database

YearReference
2023
A new vaccination regimen using adenovirus-vectored vaccine confers effective protection against African swine fever virus in swine.
Liu, Wenming
Li, Hengchun
Liu, Bo
Lv, Tianxing
Yang, Chenchen
Chen, Si
Feng, Liqiang
Lai, Liangxue
Duan, Ziyuan
Chen, Xinwen
Li, Pingchao
Guan, Suhua
Chen, Ling
Emerg Microbes Infect 2023 Dec;12(2): 2233643
Abstract

African swine fever (ASF) is an acute and highly contagious lethal infectious disease in swine that severely threatens the global pig industry. At present, a safe and efficacious vaccine is urgently required to prevent and control the disease. In this study, we evaluated the safety and immunogenicity of replication-incompetent type-2 adenoviruses carrying African swine fever virus (ASFV) antigens, namely (p30), (p54), (CD2v), (p72), and (p72 chaperone). A vaccine cocktail delivered by simultaneous intramuscular (IM) and intranasal (IN) administration robustly elicited both systemic and mucosal immune responses against AFSV in mice and swine and provided highly effective protection against the circulating ASFV strain in farmed pigs. This multi-antigen cocktail vaccine was well tolerated in the vaccinated animals. No significant interference among antigens was observed. The combined IM and IN vaccination using this adenovirus-vectored antigen cocktail vaccine warrants further evaluation for providing safe and effective protection against ASFV infection and transmission.

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