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Issue 1081 coverImpact of Emerging Zoonotic Diseases on Animal Health: 8th Biennial Conference of the Society for Tropical Veterinary Medicine Volume 1081 published October 2006
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1081: 193–201 (2006). doi: 10.1196/annals.1373.023
Copyright © 2006 by the New York Academy of Sciences
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Articles by BUBLOT, M.
Articles by MICKLE, T. R
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Articles by BUBLOT, M.
Articles by MICKLE, T. R

Part I. Trends in Emerging Zoonoses

Development and Use of Fowlpox Vectored Vaccines for Avian Influenza

MICHEL BUBLOTa, NIKKI PRITCHARDb, DAVID E SWAYNEc, PAUL SELLECKd, KEMAL KARACAe, DAVID L SUAREZc, JEAN-CHRISTOPHE AUDONNETa AND THOMAS R MICKLEf

a Merial SAS, Discovery Research, 69007 Lyon, France b Merial Select, Inc. Gainesville, Georgia 30503, USA c Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Athens, Georgia 30605, USA d Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Geelong 3220, Australia e Merial Limited Inc., Athens, Georgia 30601, USA f Merial Avian Global Enterprise, Gainesville, Georgia 30503, USA

Key Words: avian influenza • recombinant vaccine • fowlpox vector • DIVA vaccine

Address for correspondence: Michel Bublot, Merial SAS, Discovery Research, 254, rue Marcel Mérieux, 69007 Lyon, France. Voice: 33-4-7272-5973; fax: 33-4-7272-3316.  e-mail: michel.bublot{at}merial.com

The avian influenza (AI) vaccine designated TROVACTM-AIV H5 (TROVAC-H5) contains a live recombinant fowlpox rec. (FP) recombinant (recFP), expressing the hemagglutinin (HA) gene of an AI H5 subtype isolate. This recombinant vaccine was granted a license in the United States for emergency use in 1998 and full registration in Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador where over 2 billion doses have been administered. One injection of TROVAC-H5 protects chickens against AI-induced mortality and morbidity for at least 20 weeks, and significantly decreases shedding after challenge with a wide panel of H5-subtype AI strains, regardless of neuraminidase subtype. Recently, excellent protection was demonstrated against 2003 and 2004 Asian highly pathogenic H5N1 isolates. Whereas TROVAC-H5 AI H5 efficacy was not inhibited by anti-AI or anti-fowlpox maternal antibodies (passive immunity), protection to AI was significantly decreased in chickens previously vaccinated or infected with FP (active immunity). Advantages of the TROVAC-H5 vaccine over inactivated AI vaccines are: (a) single administration at 1 day of age and early onset (1 week) of protection, (b) easy monitoring of AI infection in vaccinated flocks with agar gel precipitation (AGP) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) used as tests to differentiate infected from vaccinated animals (DIVA tests), and (c) no residue problem due to adjuvant. These features make TROVAC-H5 an ideal AI vaccine for routine administration of day-of-age chicks in hatcheries. RecFP expressing HA from three lineages of H7 subtype (Eurasian, American, and Australian) were also tested for efficacy against a highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) Eurasian HPAI H7N1. Only the recFP expressing the Eurasian H7 gene provided sufficient protection indicating that the breadth of protection induced by recFP is apparently restricted for H7 isolates. The fowlpox vector technology can also be used for the production of an emergency vaccine: once the HA sequence of an emerging AI virus is known, recFP can be rapidly generated. TROVAC-H5 has recently been shown to be immunogenic in cats and could therefore also be considered for use in mammals.




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E. N. T. Meeusen, J. Walker, A. Peters, P.-P. Pastoret, and G. Jungersen
Current Status of Veterinary Vaccines
Clin. Microbiol. Rev., July 1, 2007; 20(3): 489 - 510.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]



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