Limited Cross-Protection against Infectious Bronchitis Provided by Recombinant Infectious Bronchitis Viruses Expressing Heterologous Spike Glycoproteins

Sarah Keep , Samantha Sives, Phoebe Stevenson-Leggett, Paul Britton, Lonneke Vervelde, Erica Bickerton

Research output: Contribution to journalSpecial issuepeer-review

Abstract

Gammacoronavirus infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) causes an economically important respiratory disease of poultry. Protective immunity is associated with the major structural protein,
spike (S) glycoprotein, which induces neutralising antibodies and defines the serotype. Crossprotective immunity between serotypes is limited and can be difficult to predict. In this study, the ability of two recombinant IBV vaccine candidates, BeauR-M41(S) and BeauR-4/91(S), to induce cross-protection against a third serotype, QX, was assessed. Both rIBVs are genetically based on the Beaudette genome with only the S gene derived from either M41 or 4/91, two unrelated serotypes. The use of these rIBVs allowed for the assessment of the potential of M41 and 4/91 S glycoproteins to induce cross-protective immunity against a heterologous QX challenge. The impact of the order
of vaccination was also assessed. Homologous primary and secondary vaccination with BeauRM41(S) or BeauR-4/91(S) resulted in a significant reduction of infectious QX load in the trachea at four days post-challenge, whereas heterologous primary and secondary vaccination with BeauRM41(S) and BeauR-4/91(S) reduced viral RNA load in the conjunctiva-associated lymphoid tissue(CALT). Both homologous and heterologous vaccination regimes reduced clinical signs and birds recovered more rapidly as compared with an unvaccinated/challenge control group. Despite both rIBV BeauR-M41(S) and BeauR-4/91(S) displaying limited replication in vivo, serum titres in these
vaccinated groups were higher as compared with the unvaccinated/challenge control group. This suggests that vaccination with rIBV primed the birds for a boosted humoral response to heterologous QX challenge. Collectively, vaccination with the rIBV elicited limited protection against challenge, with failure to protect against tracheal ciliostasis, clinical manifestations, and viral replication. The use of a less attenuated recombinant vector that replicates throughout the
respiratory tract could be required to elicit a stronger and prolonged protective immune response.
Original languageEnglish
JournalVaccines
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Jun 2020

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • infectious bronchitis virus
  • coronavirus
  • reverse genetics
  • recombinant vaccine
  • spike glycoprotein
  • heterologous challenge
  • cross-protection

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Limited Cross-Protection against Infectious Bronchitis Provided by Recombinant Infectious Bronchitis Viruses Expressing Heterologous Spike Glycoproteins'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this