Effectiveness of a simultaneous rHVT-F(ND) and rHVT-H5(AI) vaccination of day-old chickens and the influence of NDV-and AIV-specific MDA on immune response and conferred protection

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Abstract

The recombinant herpesvirus of turkey (rHVT) vaccines targeting Newcastle disease (ND) and H5Nx avian influenza (AI) have been demonstrated efficient in chickens when used individually at day-old. Given the practical field constraints associated with administering two vaccines separately and in the absence of a currently available bivalent rHVT vector vaccine expressing both F(ND) and H5(AI) antigens, the aim of this study was to investigate whether interference occurs between the two vaccines when simultaneously administered in a single shot. The studies have been designed to determine (i) the ND and AI-specific protection and antibody response conferred by these vaccines inoculated alone or in combination at day-old, (ii) the influence of maternally-derived antibodies (MDA), and (iii) the potential interference between the two vaccine. Our results demonstrate that their combined administration is efficient to protect chickens against clinical signs of velogenic Newcastle disease virus (vNDV) and H5-highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAIV) infections. Viral shedding following co-vaccination is also markedly reduced, while slightly lower NDV-and AIV-specific antibody responses are observed. NDV-and AIV-specific MDA show negative effects on the onset of the specific antibody responses. However, if AIV-specific MDA reduce the protection against H5-HPAIV induced by rHVT-H5(AI) vaccine, it was not observed for ND.

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Rauw, F., Ngabirano, E., Gardin, Y., Palya, V., & Lambrecht, B. (2020). Effectiveness of a simultaneous rHVT-F(ND) and rHVT-H5(AI) vaccination of day-old chickens and the influence of NDV-and AIV-specific MDA on immune response and conferred protection. Vaccines, 8(3), 1–22. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines8030536

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