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Authors Pan L, Zhang ZW, Lv JL, Zhou P, Hu WF, Fang YZ, Chen HT, Liu XS, Shao JJ, Zhao FR, Ding YZ, Lin T, Chang HY, Zhang J, Zhang YG, Wang YL
Published Date December 2014 Volume 2014:9(1) Pages 5603—5618
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S72318
Received 6 August 2014, Accepted 11 October 2014, Published 2 December 2014
Abstract: The aim of
this study was to enhance specific mucosal, systemic, and cell-mediated
immunity and to induce earlier onset of protection against direct-contact
challenge in cattle by intranasal delivery of a nanoparticle-based nasal
vaccine against type A foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). In this study, two kinds
of nanoparticle-based nasal vaccines against type A FMD were designed: (1)
chitosan-coated poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) loaded with plasmid DNA
(Chi-PLGA-DNA) and (2) chitosan-trehalose and inactivated foot-and-mouth
disease virus (FMDV) (Chi-Tre-Inactivated). Cattle were immunized by an
intranasal route with nanoparticles and then challenged for 48 hours by direct
contact with two infected donor cattle per pen. Donors were inoculated
intradermally in the tongue 48 hours before challenge, with 0.2 mL
cattle-passaged FMDV. Serological and mucosal antibody responses were
evaluated, and virus excretion and the number of contact infections were
quantified. FMDV-specific secretory immunoglobulin (Ig)A (sIgA) antibodies in
nasal washes were initially detected at 4 days postvaccination (dpv) with two
kinds of nanoparticles. The highest levels of sIgA expression were observed in
nasal washes, at 10 dpv, from animals with Chi-PLGA-DNA nanoparticles,
followed by animals immunized once by intranasal route with a double dose of
Chi-Tre-Inactivated nanoparticles and animals immunized by intranasal route
three times with Chi-Tre-Inactivated nanoparticles (P <0.05).
FMDV-specific IgA antibodies in serum showed a similar pattern. All animals
immunized by intranasal route developed low levels of detectable IgG in serum
at 10 dpv. Following stimulation with FMDV, the highest levels of
proliferation were observed in splenocytes harvested from
Chi-PLGA-DNA-immunized animals, followed by proliferation of cells harvested
from Chi-Tre-Inactivated nanoparticle-immunized animals (P <0.05). Higher protection rates
were associated with the highest sIgA antibody responses induced in the
Chi-PLGA-DNA nanoparticle-immunized group. Only one animal was clinically
affected with mild signs after 7 days of contact challenge, after a delay of
2–3 days compared with the clinically affected negative-control group. Of the
five animals directly challenged that were vaccinated by intranasal route with
a double dose of Chi-Tre-Inactivated, four were clinically infected; however,
the degree of severity of disease in this group was lower than in control
cattle. The number of viral RNA copies in nasal swabs from the vaccinated,
severely infected group was significantly higher than in swabs from the
vaccinated, clinically protected group. These data suggested that intranasal
delivery of Chi-PLGA-DNA nanoparticles resulted in higher levels of mucosal,
systemic, and cell-mediated immunity than did of Chi-Tre-Inactivated
nanoparticles. In conclusion, although intranasal delivery with FMDV antigen
mediated by nanoparticles did not provide complete clinical protection, it
reduced disease severity and virus excretion and delayed clinical symptoms.
Chi-PLGA-DNA nanoparticle vaccines have potential as a nasal delivery system
for vaccines.
Keywords: FMDV, nanoparticles,
chitosan, trehalose, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid), PLGA