A Recombinant Duck Plague Virus Containing the ICP27 Deletion Marker Provides Robust Protection in Ducks.

含有 ICP27 缺失标记的重组鸭瘟病毒可为鸭子提供强大的保护

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作者:Wu Ying, Liu Lu, Zhang Mengya, Zhan Haichuan, Wang Chenjia, Wang Mingshu, Chen Shun, Jia Renyong, Yang Qiao, Zhu Dekang, Liu Mafeng, Zhao Xinxin, Zhang Shaqiu, Huang Juan, Ou Xumin, Mao Sai, Gao Qun, Sun Di, Tian Bin, Cheng Anchun
Duck plague virus (DPV) is a member of Alphaherpesvirus genus and poses a major threat to waterfowl breeding. Genetic engineered vaccines that are capable of distinguishing naturally infected from vaccine-immunized animals are useful for eradicating duck plague. In this study, reverse genetics was used to develop an ICP27-deficient strain (CHv-ΔICP27), and its potential as a marker vaccination candidate was evaluated. The results showed that the CHv-ΔICP27 generated in this study exhibited good genetic stability in vitro and was highly attenuated both in vivo and in vitro. The level of neutralizing antibody generated by CHv-ΔICP27 was comparable to that induced by a commercial DPV vaccine, suggesting that it could protect ducks from virulent DPV attack. By using molecular identification techniques such as PCR, restriction fragment length polymorphism, immunofluorescence, Western blotting, and others, it is possible to differentiate the CHv-ΔICP27 from wild-type strains. Moreover, ICP27 can also be a potential target for the genetic engineering vaccine development of alphavirus or perhaps the entire herpesvirus family members due to the highly conservative of ICP27 protein in all herpesvirus family members. IMPORTANCE The development of distinguishable marker vaccines from natural infection is a key step toward eradicating duck plague. Here, we generated a recombinant DPV that carries an ICP27 deletion marker that could be easily distinguished from wild-type strain by molecular biological methods. It was highly attenuated in vitro and in vivo and could provide comparable protection to ducks after a single dose of immunizations, as commercial vaccines did. Our findings support the use of the ICP27-deficient virus as a marker vaccine for DPV control and future eradication.

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