4.6 Article

Clinical, Virological and Immunological Responses after Experimental Infection with African Horse Sickness Virus Serotype 9 in Immunologically Naive and Vaccinated Horses

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14071545

Keywords

African horse sickness; experimental infection; live attenuated vaccine; sero-neutralization test; ELISA; PCR; test precocity; virus isolation; tests performance characteristics

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Funding

  1. INIA-MAPA [EG17-141]

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This study investigated the response of immunologically naive and vaccinated horses to African horse sickness virus. Immunologically naive horses showed clinical symptoms and sustained viremia after infection. Vaccinated horses did not show significant side effects and were largely asymptomatic after infection.
This study described the clinical, virological, and serological responses of immunologically naive and vaccinated horses to African horse sickness virus (AHSV) serotype 9. Naive horses developed a clinical picture resembling the cardiac form of African horse sickness. This was characterized by inappetence, reduced activity, and hyperthermia leading to lethargy and immobility-recumbency by days 9-10 post-infection, an end-point criteria for euthanasia. After challenge, unvaccinated horses were viremic from days 3 or 4 post-infection till euthanasia, as detected by serogroup-specific (GS) real time RT-PCR (rRT-PCR) and virus isolation. Virus isolation, antigen ELISA, and GS-rRT-PCR also demonstrated high sensitivity in the post-mortem detection of the pathogen. After infection, serogroup-specific VP7 antibodies were undetectable by blocking ELISA (b-ELISA) in 2 out of 3 unvaccinated horses during the course of the disease (9-10 dpi). Vaccinated horses did not show significant side effects post-vaccination and were largely asymptomatic after the AHSV-9 challenge. VP7-specific antibodies could not be detected by the b-ELISA until day 21 and day 30 post-inoculation, respectively. Virus neutralizing antibody titres were low or even undetectable for specific serotypes in the vaccinated horses. Virus isolation and GS-rRT-PCR detected the presence of AHSV vaccine strains genomes and infectious vaccine virus after vaccination and challenge. This study established an experimental infection model of AHSV-9 in horses and characterized the main clinical, virological, and immunological parameters in both immunologically naive and vaccinated horses using standardized bio-assays.

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