Journal of Integrative Agriculture (Sep 2020)

Protective efficacy of an H5/H7 trivalent inactivated vaccine produced from Re-11, Re-12, and H7-Re2 strains against challenge with different H5 and H7 viruses in chickens

  • Xian-ying ZENG,
  • Xiao-han CHEN,
  • Shu-jie MA,
  • Jiao-jiao WU,
  • Hong-mei BAO,
  • Shu-xin PAN,
  • Yan-jing LIU,
  • Guo-hua DENG,
  • Jian-zhong SHI,
  • Pu-cheng CHEN,
  • Yong-ping JIANG,
  • Yan-bing LI,
  • Jing-lei HU,
  • Tong LU,
  • Sheng-gang MAO,
  • Xing-fu GUO,
  • Jing-li LIU,
  • Guo-bin TIAN,
  • Hua-lan CHEN

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 9
pp. 2294 – 2300

Abstract

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We developed an H5/H7 trivalent inactivated vaccine by using Re-11, Re-12, and H7-Re2 vaccine seed viruses, which were generated by reverse genetics and derived their HA genes from A/duck/Guizhou/S4184/2017(H5N6) (DK/GZ/S4184/17) (a clade 2.3.4.4d virus), A/chicken/Liaoning/SD007/2017(H5N1) (CK/LN/SD007/17) (a clade 2.3.2.1d virus), and A/chicken/Guangxi/SD098/2017(H7N9) (CK/GX/SD098/17), respectively. The protective efficacy of this novel vaccine and that of the recently used H5/H7 bivalent inactivated vaccine against different H5 and H7N9 viruses was evaluated in chickens. We found that the H5/H7 bivalent vaccine provided solid protection against the H7N9 virus CK/GX/SD098/17, but only 50–60% protection against different H5 viruses. In contrast, the novel H5/H7 trivalent vaccine provided complete protection against the H5 and H7 viruses tested. Our study underscores the importance of timely updating of vaccines for avian influenza control.

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