Evaluation of Immunogenicity of an Orf Virus Vector-Based Vaccine Delivery Platform in Sheep
Sean R. Wattegedera, Jackie Thomson, Lesley Coulter, Ann Wood, Rebecca K. McLean, Holly Hill, Cameron Cunnea, Karen Snedden, Ann Percival, Javier Palarea-Albaladejo, Gary Entrican, David Longbottom, David J. Griffiths, Colin J. McInnes

TL;DR
Researchers tested an Orf virus-based vaccine in sheep and found it effectively triggered immune responses against a bacterial infection without needing an adjuvant.
Contribution
The study demonstrates a novel Orf virus vector vaccine platform that induces both humoral and cellular immunity in sheep without adjuvants.
Findings
Both live and inactivated mORFV-ompA vaccines induced anti-MOMP antibodies in sheep.
Vaccines stimulated IFN-γ and IL-17A cellular responses with minimal IL-10 and no IL-4.
No immune response to the Orf virus vector itself was detected after immunization.
Abstract
Background/Objective: Virus-based vaccine vectors have been widely utilised in commercial vaccines, predominantly for virus infections. They also offer promise for bacterial diseases, for which many vaccines are sub-optimal or ineffective. It is well-established for chlamydial infections, including ovine enzootic abortion, that the major outer membrane protein (MOMP) antigen is protective. Immune responses strongly associated with controlling Chlamydiae include cellular interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) production. Methods: A study was conducted to compare the ability of a modified Orf virus vector directly with a modified sheep maedi visna virus vector to deliver the C. abortus antigen ompA and stimulate vaccine-induced responses in sheep. The Orf virus-based vaccine (mORFV-ompA) was found to be more effective in stimulating MOMP-specific antibodies and cellular antigen-driven IFN-γ in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirus-based gene therapy research · Poxvirus research and outbreaks · Virology and Viral Diseases
