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Topic:Vaccine development

Vaccine development in horses involves the creation and refinement of immunizations to protect equine populations from infectious diseases. This process includes identifying antigens, formulating vaccines, and evaluating their safety and efficacy through clinical trials. Vaccines stimulate the horse's immune system to recognize and combat specific pathogens, thereby reducing the incidence and severity of diseases. Common equine vaccines target diseases such as equine influenza, tetanus, and West Nile virus. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, challenges, and advancements in vaccine development for equine health.
A proviral derivative from a reference attenuated EIAV vaccine strain failed to elicit protective immunity.
Virology    November 20, 2010   Volume 410, Issue 1 96-106 doi: 10.1016/j.virol.2010.10.032
Ma J, Shi N, Jiang CG, Lin YZ, Wang XF, Wang S, Lv XL, Zhao LP, Shao YM, Kong XG, Zhou JH, Shen RX.To investigate essential factors that determine the efficacy of vaccines against lentiviruses, an effective attenuated equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) vaccine strain and a proviral derivative of the vaccine were compared with respect to differences in inducing protective immunity. Although these two strains replicated equally well in vitro and in vivo, the proviral strain induced significantly less protection from disease and infection caused by viral challenge and significantly lower specific neutralizing capability. These findings indicated that the proviral strain had lost the ability...
A multiphasic typing approach to subtype Streptococcus equi subspecies equi. Lanka S, Borst LB, Patterson SK, Maddox CW.The objective of the present investigation was to differentiate between strains of Streptococcus equi subspecies equi implicated in abscess formation in vaccinated horses. Streptococcus equi isolates recovered from clinical specimens associated with equine strangles cases submitted to the University of Illinois Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory were compared with S. equi isolates representing at least 12 lots of a commercial modified live vaccine (MLV) to determine whether the isolates obtained from the abscesses were vaccine or wild type. Genotyping techniques evaluated included enterobacteria...
Antibody responses induced by Japanese whole inactivated vaccines against equine influenza virus (H3N8) belonging to Florida sublineage clade2.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    November 19, 2010   Volume 73, Issue 4 483-485 doi: 10.1292/jvms.10-0408
Yamanaka T, Bannai H, Nemoto M, Tsujimura K, Kondo T, Matsumura T.In 2010, the World Organisation for Animal Health recommended the inclusion of a Florida sublineage clade2 strain of equine influenza virus (H3N8), which is represented by A/equine/Richmond/1/07 (Richmond07), in equine influenza vaccines. Here, we evaluate the antigenic differences between Japanese vaccine strains and Richmond07 by performing hemagglutination inhibition (HI) assays. Ferret antiserum raised to A/equine/La Plata/93 (La Plata93), which is a Japanese vaccine strain, reacted with Richmond07 at a similar titer to La Plata93. Moreover, two hundred racehorses exhibited similar geometr...
Equus caballus papillomavirus-2 (EcPV-2): an infectious cause for equine genital cancer?
Equine veterinary journal    November 3, 2010   Volume 42, Issue 8 738-745 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2010.00311.x
Scase T, Brandt S, Kainzbauer C, Sykora S, Bijmholt S, Hughes K, Sharpe S, Foote A.The aetiology of genital squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) in horses remains unknown, but the similarity to the disease in man, for which papillomavirus infection has been shown to be a causal factor, requires to be investigated in horses. Objective: One or more novel papillomaviruses cause equine genital SCC and its associated premalignant lesions. Methods: DNA was extracted from samples of equine genital SCC and performed rolling circle amplification, in order to identify closed circular DNA viral genomes within the samples. The amplified DNA was subcloned and sequenced and the DNA sequence comp...
Induction of neutralizing antibodies to Hendra and Nipah glycoproteins using a Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus in vivo expression system.
Vaccine    November 2, 2010   Volume 29, Issue 2 212-220 doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.10.053
Defang GN, Khetawat D, Broder CC, Quinnan GV.The emergence of Hendra Virus (HeV) and Nipah Virus (NiV) which can cause fatal infections in both animals and humans has triggered a search for an effective vaccine. Here, we have explored the potential for generating an effective humoral immune response to these zoonotic pathogens using an alphavirus-based vaccine platform. Groups of mice were immunized with Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus replicon particles (VRPs) encoding the attachment or fusion glycoproteins of either HeV or NiV. We demonstrate the induction of highly potent cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies to both viruses usi...
Bovine papillomavirus E7 oncoprotein binds to p600 in naturally occurring equine sarcoids.
The Journal of general virology    October 21, 2010   Volume 92, Issue Pt 2 378-382 doi: 10.1099/vir.0.025866-0
Corteggio A, Di Geronimo O, Roperto S, Roperto F, Borzacchiello G.Studies regarding the functions of the bovine papillomavirus (BPV) E7 oncoprotein in vivo are lacking and no E7-mediated mechanism underlying mesenchymal carcinogenesis is known. Here, we show that the interaction between the 600 kDa retinoblastoma protein-associated factor (p600) and BPV E7, described in vitro in cultured cells, takes place in vivo in naturally occurring equine sarcoids. In these cancers we detect the expression of E7 and p600, and demonstrate that E7 and p600 co-localize and physically interact. Furthermore, intracellular signals involved in p600 functional activity are foun...
Equine influenza – surveillance and control.
Influenza and other respiratory viruses    October 21, 2010   Volume 4, Issue 6 339-344 doi: 10.1111/j.1750-2659.2010.00176.x
Cullinane A, Elton D, Mumford J.Equine influenza virus (EIV) is considered the most important respiratory virus of horses because it is highly contagious and has the potential to disrupt major equestrian events. Equine influenza (EI) can be controlled by vaccination but it has been demonstrated repeatedly in the field that antigenic drift impacts on vaccine efficacy. EI surveillance maintains awareness of emergence and international spread of antigenic variants. It not only serves as an early warning system for horse owners, trainers and veterinary clinicians but is fundamental to influenza control programmes based on vaccin...
Pilot immunization of mice infected with an equine strain of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis.
Veterinary therapeutics : research in applied veterinary medicine    October 16, 2010   Volume 11, Issue 1 E1-E8 
Gorman JK, Gabriel M, MacLachlan NJ, Nieto N, Foley J, Spier S.This pilot study evaluated protection of an equine autogenous bacterin-toxoid vaccine against Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis infection. Twenty-four BALB/c mice were inoculated with two doses of bacterin-toxoid vaccine or two injections of a placebo. Clinical, microbiologic, and pathologic outcomes were assessed after intradermal infection with one of two equine-origin C. pseudotuberculosis strains. Mice receiving bacterin-toxoid from fast-growing C. pseudotuberculosis showed significant protection from challenge infection, as evidenced by a higher survival rate, fewer gross and histopathol...
Equine neonates have attenuated humoral and cell-mediated immune responses to a killed adjuvanted vaccine compared to adult horses.
Clinical and vaccine immunology : CVI    October 13, 2010   Volume 17, Issue 12 1896-1902 doi: 10.1128/CVI.00328-10
Ryan C, Giguère S.The objectives of this study were to compare relative vaccine-specific serum immunoglobulin concentrations, vaccine-specific lymphoproliferative responses, and cytokine profiles of proliferating lymphocytes between 3-day-old foals, 3-month-old foals, and adult horses after vaccination with a killed adjuvanted vaccine. Horses were vaccinated intramuscularly twice at 3-week intervals with a vaccine containing antigens from bovine viral respiratory pathogens to avoid interference from maternal antibody. Both groups of foals and adult horses responded to the vaccine with a significant increase in ...
Amino acid mutations in the env gp90 protein that modify N-linked glycosylation of the Chinese EIAV vaccine strain enhance resistance to neutralizing antibodies.
Viral immunology    October 5, 2010   Volume 23, Issue 5 531-539 doi: 10.1089/vim.2009.0006
Han X, Zou J, Wang X, Guo W, Huo G, Shen R, Xiang W.The Chinese EIAV vaccine is an attenuated live-virus vaccine obtained by serial passage of a virulent horse isolate (EIAV(L)) in donkeys (EIAV(D)), and subsequently in donkey cells in vitro. In this study, we compare the env gene of the original horse virulent virus (EIAV(L)) with attenuated strains serially passaged in donkey MDM (EIAV(DLV)), and donkey dermal cells (EIAV(FDDV)). Genetic comparisons among parental and attenuated strains found that vaccine strains contained amino acid substitutions/deletions in gp90 that resulted in a loss of three potential N-linked glycosylation sites, desig...
Molecular characterization of equine rotaviruses circulating in Argentinean foals during a 17-year surveillance period (1992-2008).
Veterinary microbiology    September 8, 2010   Volume 148, Issue 2-4 150-160 doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2010.08.032
Garaicoechea L, Miño S, Ciarlet M, Fernández F, Barrandeguy M, Parreño V.P[12]G3 and P[12]G14 equine rotaviruses (ERVs) are epidemiologically important in horses. In Argentina, the prevalent ERV strains have been historically P[12]G3. The aim of this study was the detection and characterization of ERV strains circulating in foals in Argentina during a 17-year study (1992-2008). Additionally, the gene sequences of VP7, VP4 and NSP4 encoding genes of representative Argentinean ERV strains were determined and phylogenetic analyses were performed to elucidate the evolutionary relationships of the ERV strains in Argentina. ERVs were detected in 165 (21%) out of 771 diar...
Duration of immunity induced by an equine influenza and tetanus combination vaccine formulation adjuvanted with ISCOM-Matrix.
Vaccine    August 20, 2010   Volume 28, Issue 43 6989-6996 doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.08.043
Heldens JG, Pouwels HG, Derks CG, Van de Zande SM, Hoeijmakers MJ.Equine influenza is a contagious disease caused by equine influenza virus which belongs to the orthomyxovirus family. Outbreaks of equine influenza cause severe economic loses to the horse industry and consequently horses in competition are required to be regularly vaccinated against equine influenza. Unlike the existing inactivated vaccines, Equilis Prequenza Te is the only one able to induce protection against clinical disease and virus excretion after a primary vaccination course consisting of two vaccine applications 4-6 weeks apart until the recommended time of the third vaccination. In t...
[The use of a GnRH vaccine in mares and stallions to influence undesirable behavior: a retrospective study of 31 cases].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    August 5, 2010   Volume 152, Issue 8 373-377 doi: 10.1024/0036-7281/a000085
Wenzinger B, Kähn W, Bleul U.The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of a GnRH vaccine (Equity) on behavior and gonadal function in horses with unwanted behavior. The reason for the treatment was asked using a questionnaire and the findings of physical examination, rectal palpation as well as rectal ultrasonography, were recorded. The results of these examinations and the behavior of 21 mares and 10 stallions before the first and after the second administration of the GnRH vaccine were compared. In 84 % of all cases a decrease of the unwanted behavior could be observed. In the mares the ovaries were significan...
Equine influenza: a review of an unpredictable virus.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    August 3, 2010   Volume 189, Issue 1 7-14 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2010.06.026
Daly JM, MacRae S, Newton JR, Wattrang E, Elton DM.This review discusses some of the challenges still faced in the control of equine influenza virus H3N8 infection. A widespread outbreak of equine influenza in the United Kingdom during 2003 in vaccinated Thoroughbred racehorses challenged the current dogma on vaccine strain selection. Furthermore, several new developments in the first decade of the 21st century, including transmission to and establishment in dogs, a presumed influenza-associated encephalopathy in horses and an outbreak of equine influenza in Australia, serve as a reminder of the unpredictable nature of influenza viruses. The a...
In vivo cross-protection to African horse sickness Serotypes 5 and 9 after vaccination with Serotypes 8 and 6.
Vaccine    July 16, 2010   Volume 28, Issue 39 6505-6517 doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.06.105
von Teichman BF, Dungu B, Smit TK.The polyvalent African horsesickness (AHS) attenuated live virus (AHS-ALV) vaccine produced at Onderstepoort Biological Products incorporates 7 of the 9 known serotypes circulating in southern Africa. Serological cross-reaction has been shown in vitro to Serotypes 5 and 9 by Serotypes 8 and 6 respectively, but the degree of in vivo cross-protection between these serotypes in vaccinated horses has not previously been reported. Due to the increasing incidence of AHS Serotypes 5 and 9 in the field, over the last 3-4 seasons of AHS in South Africa, and the absence of Serotypes 5 and 9 in the AHS-A...
A reverse genetics system of African horse sickness virus reveals existence of primary replication.
FEBS letters    June 26, 2010   Volume 584, Issue 15 3386-3391 doi: 10.1016/j.febslet.2010.06.030
Matsuo E, Celma CC, Roy P.African horse sickness virus (AHSV), a member of the orbivirus genus of the family Reoviridae, is an insect-vectored pathogen of horses of concern to the equine industry. Studies on AHSV replication and pathogenesis have been hampered by the lack of reverse genetics allowing targeted mutation of viral genomes. We demonstrate that AHSV single-stranded RNA synthesized in vitro (core transcripts) is infectious and that there are distinct primary and secondary stages of the replication cycle. Transfection with a mixture of core transcripts from two different serotypes or a mixture of core transcri...
REVIEW PAPER: pathology of animal models of alphavirus encephalitis.
Veterinary pathology    June 15, 2010   Volume 47, Issue 5 790-805 doi: 10.1177/0300985810372508
Steele KE, Twenhafel NA.The encephalitides caused by Venezuelan (VEEV), eastern (EEEV), and western (WEEV) equine encephalitis viruses are important natural diseases of horses and humans and potential agents of biowarfare or bioterrorism. No licensed vaccines or specific therapies exist to prevent or treat human infections with VEEV, EEEV, or WEEV. Well-characterized animal models are needed to support the development of such medical countermeasures under the United States Food and Drug Administration's "Animal Rule." This review focuses on the pathological features and pathogenetic mechanisms of these alphaviral enc...
Control of EHV-1 viremia and nasal shedding by commercial vaccines.
Vaccine    June 9, 2010   Volume 28, Issue 32 5203-5211 doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.05.065
Goehring LS, Wagner B, Bigbie R, Hussey SB, Rao S, Morley PS, Lunn DP.Equine herpesvirus-1 is a cause of outbreaks of abortion and neurological disease. The pathogenesis of both these diseases depends on establishment of viremia. An experiment was performed to determine the protective efficacy of two commercially available vaccines used with an optimized 3-dose vaccination regime: a modified-live viral (MLV) and a high antigen load killed vaccine licensed for abortion control. The study design was a blinded, randomized challenge trial. Three groups of 8 yearling ponies received one of three treatments: MLV vaccine (Rhinomune, Boehringer Ingelheim Vetmedica, Inc....
Isolation and characterisation of equine influenza viruses (H3N8) from Europe and North America from 2008 to 2009.
Veterinary microbiology    June 1, 2010   Volume 147, Issue 1-2 19-27 doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2010.05.040
Bryant NA, Rash AS, Woodward AL, Medcalf E, Helwegen M, Wohlfender F, Cruz F, Herrmann C, Borchers K, Tiwari A, Chambers TM, Newton JR, Mumford JA....Like other influenza A viruses, equine influenza virus undergoes antigenic drift. It is therefore essential that surveillance is carried out to ensure that recommended strains for inclusion in vaccines are kept up to date. Here we report antigenic and genetic characterisation carried out on equine influenza virus strains isolated in North America and Europe over a 2-year period from 2008 to 2009. Nasopharyngeal swabs were taken from equines showing acute clinical signs and submitted to diagnostic laboratories for testing and virus isolation in eggs. The sequence of the HA1 portion of the viral...
[Study of the correlation between the plasma viral load and protective immunity induced by the equine infectious anemia attenuated vaccine and its parental virulent strain].
Bing du xue bao = Chinese journal of virology    May 20, 2010   Volume 26, Issue 2 128-133 
Cao XZ, Lin YZ, Li L, Jiang CG, Zhao LP, Lv XL, Zhou JH.The threshold hypothesis of attenuated lentiviral vaccine considers that the type of host response to infections of lentiviruses depends on the viral load. To evaluate the correlation between viral loads of the attenuated vaccine strain of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) and their effects to induce protective immunity, longitudinal plasma viral loads in groups of horses inoculated with either an attenuated EIAV vaccine strain (EIAV(DLV125)) or sub-lethal dose of an EIAV virulent strain (EIAV(LN40)) were compared. Similar levels of plasma viral loads ranging from 10(3)-10(5) copies/mL wer...
Selection of a rare neutralization-resistant variant following passive transfer of convalescent immune plasma in equine infectious anemia virus-challenged SCID horses.
Journal of virology    April 14, 2010   Volume 84, Issue 13 6536-6548 doi: 10.1128/JVI.00218-10
Taylor SD, Leib SR, Carpenter S, Mealey RH.Vaccines preventing HIV-1 infection will likely elicit antibodies that neutralize diverse strains. However, the capacity for lentiviruses to escape broadly neutralizing antibodies (NAbs) is not completely understood, nor is it known whether NAbs alone can control heterologous infection. Here, we determined that convalescent immune plasma from a horse persistently infected with equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) neutralized homologous virus and several envelope variants containing heterologous principal neutralizing domains (PND). Plasma was infused into young horses (foals) affected with se...
Efficacy of a whole inactivated EI vaccine against a recent EIV outbreak isolate and comparative detection of virus shedding.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    March 27, 2010   Volume 136, Issue 3-4 272-283 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2010.03.019
Paillot R, Prowse L, Donald C, Medcalf E, Montesso F, Bryant N, Watson J, Jeggo M, Elton D, Newton R, Trail P, Barnes H.An outbreak of H3N8 Equine Influenza virus (EIV) that occurred in vaccinated horses in Japan was caused by a genetically divergent EIV isolate of the Florida clade 1 sub-lineage. This virus subsequently entered Australia where it infected thousands of immunologically naïve horses. The objective of this study was to evaluate the ability of a non-updated whole inactivated equine influenza (EI) vaccine to protect if used in the face of an outbreak induced by a virus similar to the ones circulating in Japan and Australia in 2007. Seven naïve Welsh mountain ponies were immunised twice with the co...
Complex interactions between the major and minor envelope proteins of equine arteritis virus determine its tropism for equine CD3+ T lymphocytes and CD14+ monocytes.
Journal of virology    March 10, 2010   Volume 84, Issue 10 4898-4911 doi: 10.1128/JVI.02743-09
Go YY, Zhang J, Timoney PJ, Cook RF, Horohov DW, Balasuriya UB.Extensive cell culture passage of the virulent Bucyrus (VB) strain of equine arteritis virus (EAV) to produce the modified live virus (MLV) vaccine strain has altered its tropism for equine CD3(+) T lymphocytes and CD14(+) monocytes. The VB strain primarily infects CD14(+) monocytes and a small subpopulation of CD3(+) T lymphocytes (predominantly CD4(+) T lymphocytes), as determined by dual-color flow cytometry. In contrast, the MLV vaccine strain has a significantly reduced ability to infect CD14(+) monocytes and has lost its capability to infect CD3(+) T lymphocytes. Using a panel of five re...
Gene-based vaccines: Recent developments.
Current opinion in molecular therapeutics    February 9, 2010   Volume 12, Issue 1 86-93 
Liu MA.Gene-based vaccines are under development for a broad variety of applications, ranging from vaccines to immunotherapies for infectious diseases, cancer, autoimmune diseases and allergy. In addition, following the licensing of DNA vaccines for use in fish and horses, and DNA immunotherapy for the treatment of cancer in dogs, several veterinary uses of vaccines have been demonstrated for species ranging from fish and shrimp to cattle and horses. A variety of publications describing preclinical and clinical studies of the technologies used to increase the potency of gene-based vaccines, and resea...
An inactivated Vero cell-grown Japanese encephalitis vaccine formulated with Advax, a novel inulin-based adjuvant, induces protective neutralizing antibody against homologous and heterologous flaviviruses.
The Journal of general virology    February 3, 2010   Volume 91, Issue Pt 6 1407-1417 doi: 10.1099/vir.0.019190-0
Lobigs M, Pavy M, Hall RA, Lobigs P, Cooper P, Komiya T, Toriniwa H, Petrovsky N.Advax is a polysaccharide-based adjuvant that potently stimulates vaccine immunogenicity without the increased reactogenicity seen with other adjuvants. This study investigated the immunogenicity of a novel Advax-adjuvanted Vero cell culture candidate vaccine against Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) in mice and horses. The results showed that, in mice, a two-immunization, low-dose (50 ng JEV antigen) regimen with adjuvanted vaccine produced solid neutralizing immunity comparable to that elicited with live ChimeriVax-JE immunization and superior to that elicited with tenfold higher doses of a ...
West Nile Virus: is a vaccine needed?
Current opinion in investigational drugs (London, England : 2000)    January 30, 2010   Volume 11, Issue 2 139-146 
Martina BE, Koraka P, Osterhaus AD.West Nile virus (WNV) is a neurotropic Flavivirus that was associated with sporadic outbreaks of meningoencephalitis in Africa and the Middle East until 1999, when a more virulent strain emerged in the US that caused thousands of infections among humans and horses, with reported fatality rates between 10 and 50%. Although the epidemiology of WNV is changing into a more endemic pattern in the US, and the incidence of neuroinvasive disease is decreasing, the long-term effects of resolved WNV infections in humans, characterized as persistent movement disorders and various functional disabilities,...
Isolation and genetic characterization of H3N8 equine influenza virus from donkeys in China.
Veterinary microbiology    January 28, 2010   Volume 144, Issue 3-4 455-460 doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2010.01.006
Qi T, Guo W, Huang W, Dai L, Zhao L, Li H, Li X, Zhang X, Wang Y, Yan Y, He N, Xiang W.During the 2007 outbreak of equine influenza (EIV) in China, an influenza virus designated A/donkey/Xinjiang/5/2007 (donkey/Xinjiang/2007) was isolated from a symptomatic donkey in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, China. To analyze the genetic evolution of the new isolate, the hemagglutinin (HA) gene of donkey/Xinjiang/2007 was amplified and sequenced. Sequence alignment, prediction of glycosylation sites and phylogenetic analysis of the HA1 protein of donkey/Xinjiang/2007 showed most similarity to the Florida sublineage clade 2 of the American lineage of equine influenza viruses. The HA1 seq...
Loop-mediated isothermal amplification assays for detection of Equid herpesvirus 1 and 4 and differentiating a gene-deleted candidate vaccine strain from wild-type Equid herpesvirus 1 strains. Nemoto M, Tsujimura K, Yamanaka T, Kondo T, Matsumura T.Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is a novel method for the rapid and sensitive detection of DNA without the need for expensive equipment. In the present study, LAMP assays were developed for the specific detection of Equid herpesvirus 1 and 4 (EHV-1 and EHV-4, respectively) and for the differentiation of glycoprotein E (gE)-deleted EHV-1 (DeltagE) strain, a candidate strain for a live vaccine, from field EHV-1 strains. Specific primer sets were designed for the gC and gE genes of EHV-1 and for the gC gene of EHV-4. The analytical sensitivities of the LAMP assays were compared with...
Current understanding of the equine immune response to Rhodococcus equi. An immunological review of R. equi pneumonia.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    December 23, 2009   Volume 135, Issue 1-2 1-11 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2009.12.004
Dawson TRMY, Horohov DW, Meijer WG, Muscatello G.Rhodococcus equi is recognised to cause chronic purulent bronchopneumonia in foals of less than 6 months of age. Virulent strains of the bacteria possess a large 80-90 kb plasmid encoding several virulence-associated proteins, including virulence-associated protein A (VapA), which is associated with disease. R. equi pneumonia can represent significant costs and wastage to the equine breeding industry, especially on stud farms where the disease is endemic. This article reviews knowledge of the equine immune response, both in the immune adult and susceptible neonate, with respect to this pathoge...
Affects of N-terminal variation in the SeM protein of Streptococcus equi on antibody and fibrinogen binding.
Vaccine    December 14, 2009   Volume 28, Issue 6 1522-1527 doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2009.11.064
Timoney JF, DeNegri R, Sheoran A, Forster N.The clonal Streptococcus equi causes equine strangles, a highly contagious suppurative lymphadenopathy and rhinopharyngitis. An important virulence factor and vaccine component, the antiphagocytic fibrinogen binding SeM of S. equi is a surface anchored fibrillar protein. Two recent studies of N. American, Japanese and European isolates have revealed a high frequency of N-terminal amino acid variation in SeM of S. equi CF32 that suggests this region of the protein is subject to immunologic selection pressure. The aims of the present study were firstly to map regions of SeM reactive with convale...
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