Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Vaccine with cysteine peptidases and IL-12 fails to protect dogs
By Poot, J et al.·Published in Vaccine·2006·Intervet International B.V., Netherlands·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Vaccination with a preparation based on recombinant cysteine peptidases and canine IL-12 does not protect dogs from infection with Leishmania infantum.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs was vaccinated with a new vaccine designed to protect against Leishmania infantum, a parasite that causes leishmaniosis. Despite showing an immune response after vaccination, all the dogs tested positive for the parasite and developed symptoms of the disease. This means the vaccine did not provide the expected protection. Researchers believe the lack of effectiveness could be due to various factors related to the vaccine or how the dogs' immune systems responded.
People also search for: dog leishmaniasis vaccine · symptoms of leishmaniosis in dogs · canine leishmania treatment
Abstract
Cysteine peptidases (CPs) have been implicated in various processes central to the pathogenicity of Leishmania parasites, and are thought to be key factors in the host-parasite interaction. In order to fully evaluate the potential of the CPs as vaccine candidates, studies in natural host species are required. In the study we report here, recombinant L. infantum CPs CPA and CPB were used to vaccinate dogs. In order to induce an appropriate response against the antigens, recombinant canine IL-12 was added as an adjuvant either by itself or in combination with Quil A. After vaccination, dogs were given an intravenous challenge with promastigotes of L. infantum JPC strain. In both vaccinated groups (CPs with IL-12 or CPs with IL-12 and Quil A) CP-specific antibodies were detected after vaccination, indicating that there was a reaction to the vaccine. However, all dogs were found parasite-positive and all developed some degree of clinical leishmaniosis. The observed lack of efficacy of the candidate vaccines could be due, completely or in part, to a number of factors associated with the vaccine antigen, the adjuvant or host-parasite interactions. When compared to results from other studies, it seems less likely that the molecular conformation of the rCPs or rIL-12 caused this lack of efficacy. More plausible explanations are the dose and timing of the IL-12 application and the potentially different effects IL-12 induces as an adjuvant in either the murine or the canine leishmaniosis model.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16423430/