Title of article :
Isolation of salmon pancreas disease virus (SPDV) in cell culture and its ability to protect against infection by the ‘wild-type’ agent
Author/Authors :
Lَpez-Dَriga، نويسنده , , M.V. and Smail، نويسنده , , D.A and Smith، نويسنده , , R.J. and Doménech، نويسنده , , A. and Castric، نويسنده , , J. and Smith، نويسنده , , P.D. and Ellis، نويسنده , , A.E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages :
18
From page :
505
To page :
522
Abstract :
A Scottish salmon pancreas disease virus (SPDV) has been isolated and its optimum growth conditions determined. Although several fish cell lines have been tested, successful culture was achieved only with CHSE-214 cells. Cytopathic effects were observed after 5 days. The highest virus titres, calculated by microtitration assay, were reached at 15° C. After 7–9 days post-inoculation, CHSE-214 cell supernatants contained between 107–108TCID50ml−1. The cultured isolate is chloroform- and pH 3·0-sensitive, and virions are 50–60 nm in diameter. These characteristics are similar to the Irish SPDV isolates. The culture isolate induced typical pancreas disease (PD) lesions in experimentally infected Atlantic salmon and convalescent fish were resistant to experimental infection with PD-infective kidney homogenates obtained by serial in vivo passages from a PD-infected farmed salmon (termed wild-type SPDV). Furthermore, fish immunised with the inactivated cultured virus were protected against a cohabitation challenge with the wild-type virus. Immunised fish sera showed virus-neutralising activity before challenge (7 weeks post-immunisation) and from 3–6 weeks post-challenge, when sera from non-immunised fish did not neutralise the virus. At 6 weeks post-cohabitation challenge, previously immunised fish had neutralising titres of up to 1:65. Following intraperitoneal (i.p.) challenge, immunised fish showed neutralising titres as high as 1:226 at 8 weeks post-challenge. Non-immunised fish injected i.p. with the wild-type virus developed serum-neutralising activity against the cultured isolate when sampled 8 weeks after infection, confirming an antigenic relationship between the wild-type and cultured virus. The results demonstrate that the tissue culture-adapted isolate of SPDV could be successfully used to protect against challenge by the wild-type virus and could therefore have potential use as an inactivated vaccine against PD.
Keywords :
pancreas disease , virus characterisation , SPDV , serum neutralising activity , vaccination , protection
Journal title :
Fish and Shellfish Immunology
Serial Year :
2001
Journal title :
Fish and Shellfish Immunology
Record number :
2106652
Link To Document :
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