Equine herpesvirus 1 mutants devoid of glycoprotein B or M are apathogenic for mice but induce protection against challenge infection

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Abstract

Equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) mutants devoid of the open reading frames (ORFs) of either glycoprotein (g) B or M were constructed and tested for their immunogenic potential in a murine model of EHV-1 infection. The mutant viruses were engineered using the virulent EHV-1 strain RacL11 or the modified live vaccine strain RacH by inserting the Escherichia coli LacZ gene into the vital ORFs. RacL11-infected mice showed signs typical of an EHV-1 infection, whereas mice infected with the EHV-1 gB- or gM-negative mutants or with RacH did not develop disease. No difference in the pathogenic potential of RacL11 gB- and gM-negative viruses was observed after application of either phenotypically complemented or negative viruses. However, revertant RacL11 viruses in which the gB or gM gene had been restored caused EHV-1- related symptoms that were indistinguishable from those induced by RacL11. Mice that had been immunized with phenotypically negative gB-and gM-deficient EHV-1 were challenged with the RacL11 virus 25 days after immunization. Mock- immunized mice developed EHV-1 disease and high virus loads in their lungs were observed. In contrast, mice immunized with the mutant viruses did not exhibit EHV-1-caused disease. It was concluded (i) that deletion of either gB or gM abolished the virulence of strain RacL11 and (ii) that immunization with gB- or gM-negative EHV-1 elicited a protective immunity that was reflected by both virus-neutralizing antibodies and EHV-1-specific T-cells in spleens of immunized mice.

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Neubauer, A., Beer, M., Brandmüller, C., Kaaden, O. R., & Osterrieder, N. (1997). Equine herpesvirus 1 mutants devoid of glycoprotein B or M are apathogenic for mice but induce protection against challenge infection. Virology, 239(1), 36–45. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1997.8857

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