A recombinant adenoviral vector vaccine expressing the ORF2 capsid protein confers robust protection against chicken astrovirus infection
Fanrun Meng, Ruiqi Li, Longying Ding, Zhuoyuan Wang, Xiaoyang Liu, Yuchen Song, Feng Lang, Liangyu Yang, Ziqiang Cheng

TL;DR
A new adenovirus-based vaccine expressing the ORF2 protein protects chickens from astrovirus infection, showing strong immunity and reduced disease symptoms.
Contribution
A novel recombinant adenovirus vaccine using HAdV-5 vector expressing CAstV ORF2 protein is developed and shown to induce robust mucosal and systemic immunity.
Findings
The rAd5-CAstV-ORF2 vaccine achieved high titer and genetic stability over ten passages.
Vaccinated chickens showed strong antibody responses and reduced viral loads in tissues.
Histopathological analysis confirmed reduced organ damage in vaccinated birds.
Abstract
Chicken astrovirus (CAstV), which causes enteritis, nephritis, and growth retardation syndrome, including white chicken syndrome (WCS), represents a significant global economic burden, with no available vaccine. Its fecal–oral transmission route underscores the need for mucosal immunity at intestinal entry sites, while human adenovirus type 5 (HAdV-5) vectors are highly efficient at targeting mucosal tissues. To develop and evaluate a novel recombinant adenovirus-vectored vaccine against CAstV, we used the HAdV-5 vector (AdMax system) to construct rAd5-CAstV-ORF2, which expresses the immunodominant CAstV ORF2 capsid protein. The ORF2 gene was seamlessly cloned into the shuttle plasmid (pcADV-EF1-mNeonGreen-CMV) and packaged into human embryonic kidney (HEK293T) cells. The rAd5-CAstV-ORF2 vaccine achieved a high titer (6.32 × 1010 plaque-forming units [PFU]/mL) and remained genetically…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirus-based gene therapy research · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · Animal Genetics and Reproduction
