1. Inactivated and live bivalent fowl adenovirus (FAdV8b + FAdV11) breeder vaccines provide broad-spectrum protection in chicks against inclusion body hepatitis (IBH).
- Author
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Gupta A, Popowich S, Ojkic D, Kurukulasuriya S, Chow-Lockerbie B, Gunawardana T, Goonewardene K, Karunarathna R, Ayalew LE, Ahmed KA, Tikoo SK, Willson P, and Gomis S
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Antibodies, Viral immunology, Cross Reactions, Hepatitis, Viral, Animal immunology, Hepatitis, Viral, Animal mortality, Hepatitis, Viral, Animal virology, Immunity, Maternally-Acquired, Immunization, Poultry Diseases immunology, Poultry Diseases mortality, Poultry Diseases virology, Vaccines, Inactivated administration & dosage, Vaccines, Inactivated adverse effects, Viral Vaccines administration & dosage, Viral Vaccines adverse effects, Virus Shedding, Chickens, Hepatitis, Viral, Animal prevention & control, Poultry Diseases prevention & control, Vaccines, Inactivated immunology, Viral Vaccines immunology
- Abstract
Fowl adenovirus (FAdV) is comprised of five species (A to E) and 12 serotypes (1-7, 8a, 8b, 9-11). Inclusion body hepatitis (IBH) is caused by FAdV-7, 8a, 8b (species E) and FAdV-2 and 11 (species D). Commercial vaccines against IBH are not available in Canada. Autogenous FAdV broiler breeder vaccines are now used in some areas where outbreaks of IBH are occurring. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of a bivalent (species D and E) live and an inactivated FAdV broiler breeder vaccine in protecting broiler chicks against IBH through maternal antibody (MtAb) transfer. FAdV seronegative broiler breeders (n = 300/group) received either a live or inactivated bivalent (FAdV-8b-SK + FAdV-11-1047) vaccine. The live vaccine (1 × 10
4 TCID50 of each virus/bird) was given orally once at 16 weeks of age and the inactivated vaccine (1 × 106 TCID50 of each virus + 20% Emulsigen D) was given intramuscularly at 16 and 19 weeks of age. Controls (n = 150) were given saline orally. The inactivated vaccine group was boosted 3 weeks later with the same vaccine. Neutralizing antibodies (NAb) in sera (n = 10) were detected at 19, 22, 30 and 48 weeks of age. NAb were able to neutralize various FAdV serotypes within species D and E. Mean NAb were similar in the both live and killed vaccine groups at 19, 30 and 48 weeks and ranged from 2.4 to 3.7 log10 . Approximately 26 ± 7% of MtAbs were passively transferred through eggs to day-old chicks. Progeny challenged with a lethal dose (1 × 107 TCID50 /bird intramuscularly) of FAdV-8b-SK, FAdV-11-1047, or FAdV-2-685 (n = 90/group) at 14 days post-hatch (dph) showed 98-100% protection in broiler chicks to homologous or heterologous FAdV challenges. Our data suggests that a bivalent live and an inactivated FAdV vaccine are equally effective and have the potential for the control of IBH., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
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