Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line

•C6/36 mosquito cells adapt to shrimp yellow head virus (YHV) and become immortally infected.•Whole cell homgenates convert shrimp hemocytes to YHV immunopositive status but cause no disease.•This was tested as a laboratory vaccination model to protect shrimp against yellow head disease.•Shrimp were...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Fish and shellfish immunology reports 2023-12, Vol.4, p.100084-100084, Article 100084
Hauptverfasser: Gangnonngiw, Warachin, Kanthong, Nipaporn
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:•C6/36 mosquito cells adapt to shrimp yellow head virus (YHV) and become immortally infected.•Whole cell homgenates convert shrimp hemocytes to YHV immunopositive status but cause no disease.•This was tested as a laboratory vaccination model to protect shrimp against yellow head disease.•Shrimp were not protected against mortality but showed significantly extended survival. This short paper on yellow head virus Type-1 (YHV-1) of shrimp describes preliminary research on the potential for using YHV-1 attenuated in insect cells to protect shrimp against yellow head disease (YHD). YHV-1 can cause severe mortality in the cultivated shrimp Penaeus (Penaeus) monodon and Penaeus (Litopenaeus) vannamei.  No practical vaccination has been reported. The C6/36 mosquito cell cultures inoculated with YHV-1 become positive by PCR and by immunocytochemistry (immunopositive) for up to 30 split-cell passages. Shrimp injected with homogenates from low-passage cultures die from typical YHV-1 disease while shrimp injected with homogenates from high passage cultures do not, even though they become PCR positive and immunopositive for YHV-1. This suggested that viral attenuation had occurred during insect-cell passaging, and it opened the possibility of using homogenates from high-passage insect cultures as a vaccine against YHV-1. To test this hypothesis, homogenates from 30th-passage, YHV-positive cultures were injected into shrimp followed by challenge with virulent YHV-1. Controls were injected with homogenate from 30th-passage, naive (normal stock) insect-cell cultures. No shrimp mortality occurred following injection of either homogenate, but shrimp injected with the YHV-1 homogenate became both RT-PCR positive and immunopositive. Upon challenge 10 days later with YHV-1, mortality in shrimp injected with naive insect-cell homogenate was 100% within 7 days post-challenge while 100% mortality in the YHV-1 homogenate group did not occur until day 9 post-challenge. Kaplan-Meier log-rank survival analysis revealed that survival curves for the two groups were significantly different (p 
ISSN:2667-0119
2667-0119
DOI:10.1016/j.fsirep.2023.100084