Interferon-γ influences immunity elicited by vaccines against very virulent Marek’s disease virus

Vaccination of chickens with herpesvirus of turkey (HVT) confers only partial protection against challenge with a very virulent Marek’s disease virus (MDV). Here, we evaluated the ability of recombinant chicken interferon-gamma (rChIFN-γ) to enhance protective efficacy of HVT against the very virule...

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Veröffentlicht in:Antiviral research 2011-06, Vol.90 (3), p.218-226
Hauptverfasser: Haq, Kamran, Elawadli, Inas, Parvizi, Payvand, Mallick, Amirul I., Behboudi, Shahriar, Sharif, Shayan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Vaccination of chickens with herpesvirus of turkey (HVT) confers only partial protection against challenge with a very virulent Marek’s disease virus (MDV). Here, we evaluated the ability of recombinant chicken interferon-gamma (rChIFN-γ) to enhance protective efficacy of HVT against the very virulent MDV strain, RB1B. The bioactivity of IFN-γ expressed by a plasmid expression vector was confirmed by its ability to stimulate a chicken macrophage cell line (HD11) to produce nitric oxide (NO) in vitro. The administration of HVT with 5 μg of pcDNA:chIFN-γ plasmid reduced the incidence of tumor development significantly when compared to vaccinated birds (77.7% in the HVT + empty vector group and 80% in HVT group versus 33.3% in the HVT + chIFN-γ group) and significantly increased IFN-γ expression in the splenocytes of the protected group, suggesting that rChIFN-γ increases the potency of HVT against MDV. Further analysis demonstrated that the protected birds that received HVT vaccine and/or plasmid had lower MDV genome load and lower amounts of transcripts for meq and vIL-8 than in the birds without lesions. Similarly, lower expression of IL-10, IL-18 and IL-6 was observed in the chickens without lesions compared to the chickens that had lesions, suggesting an inverse association between up-regulation of these cytokines and vaccine-induced immunity. In conclusion, IFN-γ can positively influence immunity conferred by HVT vaccination against challenge with a very virulent Marek’s disease virus (vvMDV) in chickens.
ISSN:0166-3542
1872-9096
DOI:10.1016/j.antiviral.2011.04.001