Intranasal Administration of Cold-Adapted Live-Attenuated Eurasian Avian-like H1N1 Vaccine Candidate Confers Protection Against Different-Lineage H1N1 Viruses in Mice
Qiu Zhong, Zuchen Song, Fei Meng, Yanwen Wang, Yijie Zhang, Zijian Feng, Yali Zhang, Yujia Zhai, Yan Chen, Chuanling Qiao, Hualan Chen, Huanliang Yang

TL;DR
A new cold-adapted flu vaccine for swine shows strong protection in mice against multiple H1N1 virus strains, including zoonotic variants.
Contribution
Development of a live-attenuated H1N1 vaccine candidate that provides cross-lineage protection in mice.
Findings
The vaccine GX18ca is cold-adapted and temperature-sensitive, with reduced viral titers in mice.
Intranasal administration of GX18ca induces strong mucosal and systemic immune responses.
A single dose protects against homologous and heterologous H1N1 strains, with two doses reducing human H1N1 viral load.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Eurasian avian-like (EA) H1N1 swine influenza viruses, with their persistent evolution and zoonotic potential, seriously threaten both swine and human health. The objective was to develop an effective vaccine against these viruses. Methods: A cold-adapted, temperature-sensitive live-attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) candidate, GX18ca, was developed. It was derived from the wild-type EA H1N1 strain A/swine/Guangxi/18/2011 (GX18) through serial passaging in embryonated eggs at temperatures decreasing from 33 °C to 25 °C. Its characteristics were studied in mice, including attenuation, immune responses (mucosal IgA, serum IgG, IFN-γ+ CD4+/CD8+ T-cell responses), and protective efficacy against homologous (GX18), heterologous EA H1N1 (LN972), and human 2009/H1N1 (SC1) viruses. Results: GX18ca showed cold-adapted and temperature-sensitive phenotypes. In mice, it was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfluenza Virus Research Studies · Animal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Respiratory viral infections research
