Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
New vaccine strain protects mice from Brucella canis and is safe
By Eckstein, Camila et al.Ā·Published in PloS oneĀ·2020Ā·Departamento de Clí, BrazilĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: Brucella ovis mutant in ABC transporter protects against Brucella canis infection in mice and it is safe for dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Researchers tested a new vaccine for canine brucellosis, a disease caused by the bacteria Brucella canis, which currently has no available vaccine for dogs. They found that a modified strain of Brucella ovis was safe for dogs and effectively protected mice from Brucella canis infection. In dogs that received the vaccine, there were no harmful effects observed, and the vaccine did not appear in their blood or other samples over the study period. This promising vaccine could help prevent brucellosis in dogs in the future.
People also search for: dog brucellosis vaccine Ā· canine brucellosis symptoms Ā· safe vaccines for dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Vaccination is the most important tool for controlling brucellosis, but currently there is no vaccine available for canine brucellosis, which is a zoonotic disease of worldwide distribution caused by Brucella canis. This study aimed to evaluate protection and immune response induced by Brucella ovis ΔabcBA (BoΔabcBA) encapsulated with alginate against the challenge with Brucella canis in mice and to assess the safety of this strain for dogs. METHODS: Intracellular growth of the vaccine strain BoΔabcBA was assessed in canine and ovine macrophages. Protection induced by BoΔabcBA against virulent Brucella canis was evaluated in the mouse model. Safety of the vaccine strain BoΔabcBA was assessed in experimentally inoculated dogs. RESULTS: Wild type B. ovis and B. canis had similar internalization and intracellular multiplication profiles in both canine and ovine macrophages. The BoΔabcBA strain had an attenuated phenotype in both canine and ovine macrophages. Immunization of BALB/c mice with alginate-encapsulated BoΔabcBA (108 CFU) induced lymphocyte proliferation, production of IL-10 and IFN-γ, and protected against experimental challenge with B. canis. Dogs immunized with alginate-encapsulated BoΔabcBA (109 CFU) seroconverted, and had no hematologic, biochemical or clinical changes. Furthermore, BoΔabcBA was not detected by isolation or PCR performed using blood, semen, urine samples or vaginal swabs at any time point over the course of this study. BoΔabcBA was isolated from lymph nodes near to the site of inoculation in two dogs at 22 weeks post immunization. CONCLUSION: Encapsulated BoΔabcBA protected mice against experimental B. canis infection, and it is safe for dogs. Therefore, B. ovis ΔabcBA has potential as a vaccine candidate for canine brucellosis prevention.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32298378/