Emerging Microbes and Infections (Dec 2023)

Evaluation of an I177L gene-based five-gene-deleted African swine fever virus as a live attenuated vaccine in pigs

  • Yingnan Liu,
  • Zhenhua Xie,
  • Yao Li,
  • Yingying Song,
  • Dongdong Di,
  • Jingyi Liu,
  • Lang Gong,
  • Zongyan Chen,
  • Jinxian Wu,
  • Zhengqin Ye,
  • Jianqi Liu,
  • Wanqi Yu,
  • Lu Lv,
  • Qiuping Zhong,
  • Chuanwen Tian,
  • Qingqing Song,
  • Heng Wang,
  • Hongjun Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2022.2148560
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACTAfrican swine fever (ASF) is a highly contagious disease of domestic and wild pigs caused by the African swine fever virus (ASFV). The current research on ASF vaccines focuses on the development of naturally attenuated, isolated, or genetically engineered live viruses that have been demonstrated to produce reliable immunity. As a result, a genetically engineered virus containing five genes deletion was synthesized based on ASFV Chinese strain GZ201801, named ASFV-GZΔI177LΔCD2vΔMGF. The five-gene-deleted ASFV was safe and fully attenuated in pigs and provides reliable protection against the parental ASFV strain challenge. This indicates that the five-gene-deleted ASFV is a potential candidate for a live attenuated vaccine that could control the spread of ASFV.

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