Use of a Th1 stimulator adjuvant for vaccination against Neospora caninum infection in the pregnant mouse model

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Abstract

Vertical transmission from an infected cow to its fetus accounts for the vast majority of new Neospora caninum infections in cattle. A vaccine composed of a chimeric antigen named recNcMIC3-1-R, based on predicted immunogenic domains of the two microneme proteins NcMIC1 and NcMIC3, the rhoptry protein NcROP2, and emulsified in saponin adjuvants, significantly reduced the cerebral infection in non-pregnant BALB/c mice. Protection was associated with a mixed Th1/Th2-type cytokine response. However, the same vaccine formulation elicited a Th2-type immune response in pregnant mice and did not prevent vertical transmission or disease, neither in dams nor in offspring mice. In this study, an alternative vaccine formulation containing recNcMIC3-1-R emulsified in Freund's incomplete adjuvant, a stimulator of the cellular immunity, was investigated. No protection against vertical transmission and cerebral infection in the pregnant mice and a very limited protective effect in the non-pregnant mice were observed. The vaccine induced a Th1-type immune response characterized by high IgG2a titres and strong IFN-γ expression, which appeared detrimental to pregnancy. © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel,Switzerland.

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APA

Monney, T., Grandgirard, D., Leib, S. L., & Hemphill, A. (2013). Use of a Th1 stimulator adjuvant for vaccination against Neospora caninum infection in the pregnant mouse model. Pathogens, 2(2), 193–208. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens2020193

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