PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Modelling the influence of foot-and-mouth disease vaccine antigen stability and dose on the bovine immune response.

  • David Schley,
  • Reiko J Tanaka,
  • Kritsada Leungchavaphongse,
  • Vahid Shahrezaei,
  • John Ward,
  • Clare Grant,
  • Bryan Charleston,
  • Christopher J Rhodes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030435
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
p. e30435

Abstract

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Foot and mouth disease virus causes a livestock disease of significant global socio-economic importance. Advances in its control and eradication depend critically on improvements in vaccine efficacy, which can be best achieved by better understanding the complex within-host immunodynamic response to inoculation. We present a detailed and empirically parametrised dynamical mathematical model of the hypothesised immune response in cattle, and explore its behaviour with reference to a variety of experimental observations relating to foot and mouth immunology. The model system is able to qualitatively account for the observed responses during in-vivo experiments, and we use it to gain insight into the incompletely understood effect of single and repeat inoculations of differing dosage using vaccine formulations of different structural stability.