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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Feline coronavirus vaccine protects SPF but not pet cats

By Bálint, Ádám et al.·Published in Veterinary microbiology·2014·National Food Chain Safety Office·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Recombinant feline coronaviruses as vaccine candidates confer protection in SPF but not in conventional cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of specific pathogen-free (SPF) Domestic Shorthair cats received a new vaccine aimed at protecting against feline infectious peritonitis (FIP), a serious viral disease. After being vaccinated, these cats showed complete protection against a severe strain of the virus. However, when purebred British Shorthair cats were given the same vaccine, they did not gain the same level of protection and experienced severe disease instead. This difference in response may be due to genetic and immune system variations between the two groups of cats.

People also search for: cat FIP vaccine effectiveness · British Shorthair vaccination response · feline infectious peritonitis prevention

Abstract

Feline infectious peritonitis virus (FIPV) is a major pathogen of Felidae. Despite the extensive efforts taken in the past decades, development of the "ideal" live attenuated FIPV vaccine was not successful yet. In the present study, we provide data of immunisation experiments with a recombinant FCoV pair differing only in the truncation (PBFIPV-DF-2) or completion (PBFIPV-DF-2-R3i) of their ORF3abc regions. In our previous in vivo studies, these viruses proved to show the characters of low virulent or avirulent FCoV phenotypes, respectively. Therefore, we hypothesised the ability of these viruses, as possible vaccine candidates, in conferring protection in specific pathogen free (SPF) Domestic Shorthair as well as in conventional purebred British Shorthair cats. In SPF cats, after two oronasal and two intramuscular vaccinations with two weeks intervals, both vaccine candidates provided 100% protection against lethal homologous challenge with the highly virulent FIPV DF-2 strain. In contrast, the conventional purebred British Shorthair cats did not develop protection when they were immunised with the same vaccination regimes. In these groups 100% of the PBFIPV-DF-2-R3i immunised animals developed antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE). Prolonged survival was observed in 40% of the animals, while 60% showed fulminant disease course. Genetic and more probably immunological differences between the SPF and non-SPF purebred kittens can explain the different outcome of the vaccination experiment. Our data highlight the diverse immune responses between SPF and conventional cats and suggest a decisive role of previous infection by heterologous causative agents in the outcome of the vaccination against FIP.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24513277/