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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Chimeric vaccine strain of type O foot-and-mouth disease elicits a strong immune response in pigs against ME-SA and SEA topotypes.

Journal:
Veterinary microbiology
Year:
2019
Authors:
Ko, Mi-Kyeong et al.
Affiliation:
Center for Foot-and-Mouth Disease Vaccine Research · South Korea

Abstract

Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is an acute infectious disease occurring in cloven-hoofed animals. There are many variations of the virus, making it difficult to protect against the various strains with one virus vaccine. The immunogenicity has generally been evaluated in pigs using neutralizing antibodies to determine the protection level against foot-and-mouth disease virus type O. Therefore, the vaccine from the chimeric vaccine strain of ME-SA (VP4, VP2, and VP3) and SEA (VP1) topotypes developed in this study is expected to be able to protect with high neutralizing antibody titers against most of the eight FMD viruses of the four different topotypes (ME-SA, SEA, Cathay, and EURO-SA) of type O in pigs. This is a new technique for powerful vaccine development, with multiple preventive roles against various epidemic FMD strains.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30642587/