Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Coadministration of chicken GM-CSF with a DNA vaccine expressing infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) S1 glycoprotein enhances the specific immune response and protects against IBV infection

Coadministration of chicken GM-CSF with a DNA vaccine expressing infectious bronchitis virus... Various approaches have been developed to improve the efficacy of DNA vaccination, such as the use of plasmids expressing cytokines as molecular adjuvants. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether co-administration of a plasmid containing a chicken granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) gene and a plasmid containing the S1 gene of infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) could enhance the immune response and protection efficacy in chickens against challenge by virulent IBV. Plasmids carrying the S1 gene of IBV (pVAX-S1) and the chicken GM-CSF gene (pVAX-chGM-CSF) were constructed. Seven-day-old chickens were injected intramuscularly with pVAX-S1, pVAX-chGM-CSF, or both and boosted 2 weeks later. Chickens were challenged with virulent IBV at 3 weeks after the booster immunization and observed for 2 weeks. The results showed that co-administration of pVAX-chGM-CSF led to a significant enhancement of humoral and cellular responses over that of vaccination with pVAX-S1 alone. In addition, vaccination with pVAX-chGM-CSF and pVAX-S1 provided 86.7% protection (13/15) against IBV challenge. In contrast, only 73.3% of the chickens were protected against IBV challenge by pVAX-S1 vaccination alone. These results strongly indicate that chGM-CSF can be used as a molecular adjuvant to enhance the protective immunity induced by an IBV-specific DNA vaccine. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Archives of Virology Springer Journals

Coadministration of chicken GM-CSF with a DNA vaccine expressing infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) S1 glycoprotein enhances the specific immune response and protects against IBV infection

Loading next page...
1
 
/lp/springer_journal/coadministration-of-chicken-gm-csf-with-a-dna-vaccine-expressing-BOcomKzgdv

References (42)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright © 2009 by Springer-Verlag
Subject
Biomedicine; Infectious Diseases; Medical Microbiology ; Virology
ISSN
0304-8608
eISSN
1432-8798
DOI
10.1007/s00705-009-0424-7
pmid
19543689
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Various approaches have been developed to improve the efficacy of DNA vaccination, such as the use of plasmids expressing cytokines as molecular adjuvants. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether co-administration of a plasmid containing a chicken granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) gene and a plasmid containing the S1 gene of infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) could enhance the immune response and protection efficacy in chickens against challenge by virulent IBV. Plasmids carrying the S1 gene of IBV (pVAX-S1) and the chicken GM-CSF gene (pVAX-chGM-CSF) were constructed. Seven-day-old chickens were injected intramuscularly with pVAX-S1, pVAX-chGM-CSF, or both and boosted 2 weeks later. Chickens were challenged with virulent IBV at 3 weeks after the booster immunization and observed for 2 weeks. The results showed that co-administration of pVAX-chGM-CSF led to a significant enhancement of humoral and cellular responses over that of vaccination with pVAX-S1 alone. In addition, vaccination with pVAX-chGM-CSF and pVAX-S1 provided 86.7% protection (13/15) against IBV challenge. In contrast, only 73.3% of the chickens were protected against IBV challenge by pVAX-S1 vaccination alone. These results strongly indicate that chGM-CSF can be used as a molecular adjuvant to enhance the protective immunity induced by an IBV-specific DNA vaccine.

Journal

Archives of VirologySpringer Journals

Published: Jul 1, 2009

There are no references for this article.