Influence of adjuvant and antigen dose on protection induced by an inactivated whole vaccine against Neospora caninum infection in mice

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

In this study, the protection afforded by a Neospora caninum inactivated vaccine formulated with three different adjuvants (water-in-oil emulsion, aluminum hydroxide with CpG oligodeoxynucleotides and aluminum hydroxide with ginseng extract) and three different parasite doses (105, 5 × 105 or 106 inactivated whole tachyzoites) was evaluated using a mouse model. Mice were immunized subcutaneously twice at three-week intervals with inactivated Nc-Spain 1H tachyzoites and challenged by intraperitoneal inoculation with 106 live Nc-1 tachyzoites. The efficacy of the immunization was evaluated in non-pregnant BALB/c mice on days 1 and 5 (acute infection phase) and days 14 and 30 (chronic infection phase) post-challenge. The results showed the ability of water-in-oil emulsion combined with inactivated 5 × 105 tachyzoites to induce protection against neosporosis during the chronic stage, limiting parasite multiplication in the brain. Aluminum hydroxide-ginseng extract and inactivated tachyzoites reduced the number of parasites circulating in the blood during acute phase but failed to limit the establishment of chronic infection. On the other hand, a dose-effect was observed in groups vaccinated with aluminum hydroxide-ginseng extract in which the lesion severity increased as the inactivated tachyzoite dose. This study demonstrates that efficacy can significantly vary depending on the adjuvant, the dose of antigen and the phase of N. caninum infection in which the vaccine is tested.

Description

Bibliographic citation

Silvia Rojo-Montejo, Esther Collantes-Fernández, Javier Regidor-Cerrillo, Antonio Rodríguez-Bertos, Antoni Prenafeta, Mercedes Gomez-Bautista, Luis M. Ortega-Mora, Influence of adjuvant and antigen dose on protection induced by an inactivated whole vaccine against Neospora caninum infection in mice, Veterinary Parasitology, Volume 175, Issues 3–4, 2011, Pages 220-229, ISSN 0304-4017, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2010.10.028.

Relation

Has part

Has version

Is based on

Is part of

Is referenced by

Is version of

Requires

Sponsors

Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia
Laboratorios HIPRA SA

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International