Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics (Dec 2021)

Vaccination of pregnant rhesus monkeys with inactivated rotavirus as a model for achieving protection from rotavirus SA11 infection in the offspring

  • Na Yin,
  • Jinyuan Wu,
  • Xiangjing Kuang,
  • Xiaochen Lin,
  • Yan Zhou,
  • Shan Yi,
  • Xiaoqing Hu,
  • Rong Chen,
  • Yaling Liu,
  • Jun Ye,
  • Zhanlong He,
  • Maosheng Sun,
  • Hongjun Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2021.2011548
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
pp. 5656 – 5665

Abstract

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Live-attenuated rotavirus vaccine has shown low protection in underdeveloped or developing countries. However, the inactivated rotavirus vaccine may have the potential to overcome some of these challenges. In the present study, the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of a bivalent inactivated rotavirus vaccine by parenteral administration were elevated in a neonatal rhesus monkey model. A bivalent inactivated rotavirus vaccine containing G1P[8] (ZTR-68 strain) and G9P[8] (ZTR-18 strain) was administered to pregnant rhesus monkeys twice at an interval of 14 days. Neutralizing antibodies against RV strains ZTR-68, ZTR-18, SA11, WA, UK, and Gottfried emerged in pregnant rhesus monkeys and were transplacentally transmitted to the offspring. In the vaccine group, clinical symptoms of diarrhea, viral load in the gut tissue and histopathological changes were significantly reduced in the neonatal rhesus monkeys following oral challenge with the SA11 strain.

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