4.7 Article

Incidence of Carassius auratus Gibelio Gill Hemorrhagic Disease Caused by CyHV-2 Infection Can Be Reduced by Vaccination with Polyhedra Incorporating Antigens

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines9040397

Keywords

CyHV-2; vaccine; polyhedral microcrystals; cypoviruspolyhedra

Funding

  1. Key Research and Development Program of Jiangsu Province (Modern Agriculture) [BE2016322]
  2. Agricultural Science and Technology Independent Innovation Fund of Jiangsu Province of China [CX(17)2027]
  3. Triple-New Project of Aquaculture of Jiangsu Province of China [D2017-3]
  4. Priority Academic Program of Development of Jiangsu Higher Education - Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs of China

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Encapsulating vaccines into protein microcrystals for stable delivery is a promising approach, as demonstrated by this study focusing on vaccinating gibel carp against CyHV-2 using polyhedra. The results showed that the vaccine proteins encapsulated in polyhedra could be protected from degradation, and vaccinated fish exhibited increased antibody titers and survival rates following CyHV-2 challenge, suggesting a novel strategy for developing aquaculture microencapsulated vaccines.
Encapsulation of antigens within protein microcrystals (polyhedra) is a promising approach for the stable delivery of vaccines. In this study, a vaccine was encapsulated into polyhedra against cyprinid herpesvirus II (CyHV-2). CyHV-2 typically infects gibel carp, Carassius auratus gibelio, causing gill hemorrhagic disease. The vaccine was constructed using a codon-optimized sequence, D4ORF, comprising the ORF72 (region 1-186 nt), ORF66 (region 993-1197 nt), ORF81 (region 603-783 nt), and ORF82 (region 85-186 nt) genes of CyHV-2. The H1-D4ORF and D4ORF-VP3 sequences were, respectively, obtained by fusing the H1-helix sequence (region 1-90 nt) ofBombyx mori cypovirus(BmCPV) polyhedrin to the 5 ' terminal end of D4ORF and by fusing a partial sequence (1-279 nt) of the BmCPV VP3 gene to the 3 ' terminal end of D4ORF. Furthermore, BmNPV-H1-D4ORF-polh and BmNPV-D4ORF-VP3-polh recombinant B. mori nucleopolyhedroviruses (BmNPVs), belonging to the family Baculoviridae, and co-expressing BmCPV polyhedrin and H1-D4ORF or D4ORF-VP3, were constructed. H1-D4ORF and D4ORF-VP3 fusion proteins were confirmed to be encapsulated into recombinant cytoplasmic polyhedra by Western blotting. Degradation of vaccine proteins was assessed by SDS-PAGE, and the results showed that the encapsulated vaccine proteins in polyhedra could be protected from degradation. Furthermore, when gibel carp were vaccinated with the purified polyhedra from BmNPV-H1-D4ORF-polh and BmNPV-D4ORF-VP3-polh via injection, the antibody titers in the serum of the vaccinated fish reached 1:6400-1:12,800 at 3 weeks post-vaccination. Therelative percentage of survival of immunized gibel carp reached 64.71% and 58.82%, respectively, following challenge with CyHV-2. These results suggest that incorporating vaccine protein into BmCPV polyhedra may be a novel approach for developing aquaculture microencapsulated vaccines.

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