1. An inactivated whole-virus porcine parvovirus vaccine protects pigs against disease but does not prevent virus shedding even after homologous virus challenge.
- Author
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Foerster T, Streck AF, Speck S, Selbitz HJ, Lindner T, and Truyen U
- Subjects
- Animals, Nasal Mucosa virology, Parvoviridae Infections prevention & control, Parvovirus, Porcine isolation & purification, Rectum virology, Swine, Swine Diseases immunology, Swine Diseases virology, Vaccines, Inactivated administration & dosage, Vaccines, Inactivated immunology, Viral Vaccines administration & dosage, Parvoviridae Infections veterinary, Parvovirus, Porcine immunology, Swine Diseases prevention & control, Viral Vaccines immunology, Virus Shedding
- Abstract
Inactivated whole-virus vaccines against porcine parvovirus (PPV) can prevent disease but not infection and virus shedding after heterologous virus challenge. Here, we showed that the same is true for a homologous challenge. Pregnant sows were vaccinated with an experimental inactivated vaccine based on PPV strain 27a. They were challenged on day 40 of gestation with the virulent porcine parvovirus PPV-27a from which the vaccine was prepared (homologous challenge). On day 90 of gestation, the fetuses from vaccinated sows were protected against disease, while the fetuses of the non-vaccinated sows (control group) exhibited signs of parvovirus disease. All gilts, whether vaccinated or not vaccinated, showed a boost of PPV-specific antibodies indicative of virus infection and replication. Low DNA copy numbers, but not infectious virus, could be demonstrated in nasal or rectal swabs of immunized sows, but high copy numbers of challenge virus DNA as well as infectious virus could both be demonstrated in non-vaccinated sows.
- Published
- 2016
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