pubmed:abstractText |
Six different isogenic Deltacya Deltacrp derivatives of a strain of Salmonella choleraesuis var. kunzendorf-chi3246 virulent for pigs were constructed by transposon-mediated deletion mutagenesis. These strains were evaluated for virulence and ability to elicit a protective immune response in young weaned pigs after oral administration and were compared to a commercially available vaccine which lacks the 50-kb virulence plasmid (vpl(-)). These derivatives were Deltacya Deltacrp vpl(+), Deltacya Deltacrp vpl(-), Deltacya Delta(crp-cdt) vpl(+), Deltacya Delta(crp-cdt) vpl(-), Deltacya Deltacrp pmi-3834 vpl(+), and Deltacya Delta(crp-cdt) pmi-3834. In experiments to evaluate safety, no significant adverse effects of any of the vaccine constructs were observed, except that two of the strains which carried the virulence plasmid (vpl(+)) caused a small, short-term elevation in maximum temperature compared to pretreatment temperature values. Orally immunized animals, except for those vaccinated with the Deltacya Deltacrp pmi-3834 vpl(+) strain or SC-54, developed significant serum antibody responses 21 days postvaccination as measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. No cell-mediated immune responses to heat-killed S. choleraesuis were noted at the same time point as measured with heat-killed bacteria as antigen in a lymphocyte proliferation assay. In an oral challenge exposure model with a highly virulent heterologous strain of S. choleraesuis, the Deltacya Deltacrp strains with deletions in pmi were not protective. As measured by morbidity scores, the responses to challenge of the pigs vaccinated with the other four Deltacya Deltacrp derivatives were significantly better than those of the nonvaccinated, challenged group. With the exception of temperature elevation and slight differences in diarrhea scores postchallenge, none of these strains differed significantly from each other in the other clinical parameters analyzed. While the commercial vaccine was protective by most of the parameters measured, it was not fully protective against challenge with virulent S. choleraesuis as judged by diarrhea scores and temperature elevation. Collectively, these data demonstrate that Deltacya Deltacrp derivatives, with or without the virulence plasmid but not with deletions in the pmi gene, are candidates for vaccines for protection against salmonellosis in pigs.
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pubmed:affiliation |
Animal Health Discovery Research, Veterinary Infectious Diseases Section, Pharmacia & Upjohn, Inc., Kalamazoo, Michigan 49001, USA. Michael.J.Kennedy@am.pnu.com
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