黄色视频不卡_午夜福利免费观看在线_亚洲国产精品999在线_欧美绝顶高潮抽搐喷水_久久精品成人免费网站_晚上一个人看的免费电影_国产又色又爽无遮挡免费看_成人国产av品久久久

    1. <dd id="lgp98"></dd>
      • <dd id="lgp98"></dd>
        1. 廈門慧嘉生物科技有限公司
          初級(jí)會(huì)員 | 第9年

          18906011628

          當(dāng)前位置:首頁   >>   資料下載   >>   γ-干擾素(γ-IFN)ELISA試劑盒 外文文獻(xiàn)二 IFN-Y(2)

          γ-干擾素(γ-IFN)ELISA試劑盒 外文文獻(xiàn)二 IFN-Y(2)

          時(shí)間:2013-7-15閱讀:211
          分享:
          • 提供商

            廈門慧嘉生物科技有限公司
          • 資料大小

            1.1MB
          • 資料圖片

          • 下載次數(shù)

            114次
          • 資料類型

            PDF 文件
          • 瀏覽次數(shù)

            211次
          點(diǎn)擊免費(fèi)下載該資料

              Published Ahead of Print 27 July 2011. 

          10.1128/CVI.05133-11. 

          2011, 18(9):1497. DOI: Clin. Vaccine Immunol. 

          Puyan Chen

          Deyuan Li, Maoyun Xue, Chen Wang, Junbao Wang and

           

          Avian Influenza Virus in Chickens

          Immune Responses to Inactivated H9N2

          Enhances both Humoral and Cell-Mediated 

          Bursopentine as a Novel Immunoadjuvant

          http://cvi.asm.org/content/18/9/1497

          Updated information and services can be found at: 

          These include:

          REFERENCES

          http://cvi.asm.org/content/18/9/1497#ref-list-1

          This article cites 40 articles, 6 of which can be accessed free at:

          CONTENT ALERTS

           more» articles cite this article), 

          Receive: RSS Feeds, eTOCs, free alerts (when new

          http://cvi.asm.org/site/misc/reprints.xhtml Information about commercial reprint orders: 

          http://journals.asm.org/site/subscriptions/ To subscribe to to another ASM Journal go to: 

           on April 26, 2012 by Huazhong Agricultural University http://cvi.asm.org/ Downloaded from CLINICAL AND VACCINE IMMUNOLOGY, Sept. 2011, p. 1497–1502 Vol. 18, No. 9

          1556-6811/11/$12.00 doi:10.1128/CVI.05133-11

          Copyright © 2011, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

          Bursopentine as a Novel Immunoadjuvant Enhances both Humoral

          and Cell-Mediated Immune Responses to Inactivated H9N2

          Avian In?uenza Virus in Chickens

          Deyuan Li,

          1

          †* Maoyun Xue,

          2

          † Chen Wang,

          3

          Junbao Wang,

          4

          and Puyan Chen1

          Division of Key Lab of Animal Disease Diagnosis and Immunology, China’s Department of Agriculture, Nanjing Agricultural

          University, Nanjing 210095, People’s Republic of China1

          ; Food Safety Technological Engineering Research Centre,

          Jiangsu Institute of Economic and Trade Technology, Nanjing 210007, People’s Republic of China2

          ;

          College of Animal Science and Technology, Henan University of Science and Technology,

          Luoyang 471003, People’s Republic of China3

          ; and Dandong National School,

          Eastern Liaoning University, Dandong 118005, People’s Republic of China4

          Received 3 May 2011/Returned for modi?cation 6 May 2011/Accepted 18 July 2011

          There is an urgent need for identi?cation of a new adjuvant capable of selectively promoting an ef?cient

          immune response for use with vaccines and especially subunit vaccines. Our pervious study showed that

          Bursopentine (BP5) is a novel immunomodulatory peptide and has the ability to signi?cantly stimulate an

          antigen-speci?c immune response in mice. In this study, the potential adjuvant activities of BP5 were examined

          in chickens by coinjection of BP5 and an inactivated avian in?uenza virus (AIV) (A/Duck/Jiangsu/NJ08/05

          [AIV H9N2 subtype]). The results suggested that BP5 markedly elevated serum hemagglutination inhibition

          (HI) titers and antigen-speci?c antihemagglutinin (anti-HA) antibody (IgG) levels, induced both Th1 (inter-

          leukin 2 [IL-2] and gamma interferon [IFN-])- and Th2 (IL-4)-type cytokines, promoted the proliferation of

          peripheral blood lymphocytes, and increased populations of CD3 T cells and their subsets CD4 (CD3

          CD4) T cells and CD8 (CD3 CD8) T cells. Furthermore, a virus challenge experiment revealed that BP5

          contributes to protection against homologous avian in?uenza virus challenge by reducing viral replication in

          chicken lungs. This study indicates that the combination of inactivated AIVs and BP5 gives a strong immune

          response at both the humoral and cellular levels and implies that BP5 is a novel immunoadjuvant suitable for

          vaccine design.

          The immune-promoting activity of any given vaccination

          strategy is set not only by the presence of the relevant antigenic

          components in the vaccine formulation but also by the com-

          plement of suitable adjuvants (9, 20). When incorporated into

          a vaccine formulation, a suitable adjuvant acts to accelerate,

          extend, or enhance the magnitude of a speci?c immune re-

          sponse to the vaccine antigen (6). Strategies for improving

          current vaccines have emphasized making currently available

          vaccines more ef?cacious by developing a better adjuvant, es-

          pecially for inactivated viral and subunit vaccines.

          Bursopentine (BP5; with an amino acid sequence of Cys-

          Lys-Asp-Val-Tyr) is a novel immunomodulatory peptide iso-

          lated from chicken bursa of Fabricius (19). As it has the ability

          to signi?cantly stimulate antigen-speci?c immune responses at

          both the humoral and cellular levels in mice immunized with

          inactivated avian in?uenza viruses (AIVs) (19), its potential

          adjuvant activities were assessed in chickens in this study by

          using a model antigen of an inactivated AIV, A/Duck/Jiangsu/

          NJ08/05 (AIV H9N2 subtype).

          In many countries, H9N2 AIVs are an enormous economic

          burden on the commercial poultry industry when they cause

          signs of mild respiratory disease and a reduction in egg pro-

          duction. In April 1999, two World Health Organization refer-

          ence laboratories independently con?rmed the isolation of

          avian in?uenza A (H9N2) viruses for the ?rst time in humans

          (39). An increased risk of direct transmission of these viruses

          to humans is possible (21, 25, 29). Inactivated vaccines have

          been used to control AIV infection, but the best protection

          against AIV infection remains effective vaccination. Previ-

          ously, it has been shown that inactivated vaccines elicit strong

          humoral responses, and it is commonly accepted that no ade-

          quate mucosal or cellular immunity is achieved (37). However,

          cellular immunity is essential for virus clearance at the end

          stage of many viral infections (4). Adjuvants are able to im-

          prove the quantity and quality of innate immune responses by

          enhancing their speed and duration and by inducing adequate

          adaptive immunity (31). In the current study, BP5 was used as

          an adjuvant for our AIV vaccination strategy to provide an

          effective way to prevent and control H9N2 AIV infection.

          The effect of BP5 on humoral and cell-mediated immune

          responses induced by inactivated AIV vaccination was evalu-

          ated in 1-week-old speci?c-pathogen-free White Leghorn

          chickens. Humoral immunity was measured by detection of

          antigen-speci?c antibody titer and antihemagglutinin (anti-

          HA) IgG responses using the hemagglutination inhibition (HI)

          test and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), re-

          spectively. Cell-mediated immunity was evaluated by detection

          * Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of Key Lab of

          Animal Disease Diagnosis and Immunology, China’s Department of

          Agriculture, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing Agricultural

          University, 1 Weigang, Nanjing, JingSu 210095, China. Phone: 86-25-

          84396028. 86-25-84396335. : deyuanlinjau.

          † Deyuan Li and Maoyun Xue contributed equally to the paper.

          Published ahead of print on 27 July 2011.

          1497

           on April 26, 2012 by Huazhong Agricultural University http://cvi.asm.org/ Downloaded from of serum Th1 (interleukin 2 [IL-2] and gamma interferon

          [IFN-])- and Th2 (IL-4)-type cytokines (23) by ELISA, by

          measurement of chicken peripheral blood lymphocyte prolif-

          eration using the 3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-thiazolyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-

          tetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay, and by measurement of

          chicken peripheral blood CD3 T cells and their subsets CD4

          (CD3 CD4) T cells and CD8 (CD3 CD8) T cells by an

          immunophenotyping assay. Furthermore, virus challenge ex-

          periments were assayed to evaluate the protection of activated

          AIV vaccine administered with BP5 against homologous avian

          in?uenza virus replication in chicken lungs.

          MATERIALS AND METHODS

          Preparation of BP5. Synthetic BP5 was purchased from Shanghai Biotech

          Bioscience and Technology Co., Ltd. (People’s Republic of China). The se-

          quence of the synthetic peptide was con?rmed by electrospray ionization tandem

          mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS), and the purity of the synthetic peptide was

          98% by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC).

          Viruses and chicken. AIV A/Duck/Jiangsu/NJ08/05 (AIV H9N2 subtype) was

          provided by the Institute of Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Medicine, Ji-

          angsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences (Nanjing, China). Avian in?uenza

          H9N2 virus strain JS-1 (A/Chicken/Jiangsu/JS-1/2002) was isolated and kept in

          our own laboratory. AIVs were cultured in the allantoic sacs of chicken embryos.

          The AIV hemagglutination titer of the inoculated allantoic ?uid was 1:210

          ,

          corresponding to 107

          50% tissue culture infective doses (TCID50)/0.1 ml. The

          A/Duck/Jiangsu/NJ08/05 AIV was inactivated with 0.025% formaldehyde for

          72 h at 4°C. Its ef?cacy was tested by three blind virus passages in speci?c-

          pathogen-free (SPF) eggs (19, 38), and the inactivated AIV was used as a vaccine

          antigen for the following experiments.

          One-week-old SPF White Leghorn chickens from Qian Yuan hao Co., Ltd.

          (Nanjing, China), were obtained as fertilized eggs, hatched, and maintained

          in an isolation facility at the Poultry Research Institute (Nanjing, China). All

          groups of chickens were housed, handled, and immunized in accordance with

          the guidelines and with the approval of the local institutional animal exper-

          iment committee.

          Vaccination of chickens. SPF White Leghorn chickens were randomly divided

          into six experimental groups of 18 chickens each and intramuscularly immunized

          two times on days 0 and 14 with (i) a mixture of 400 l AIV (A/Duck/Jiangsu/

          NJ08/05, 107

          TCID50/0.1 ml) and 100 l phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), (ii) a

          mixture of 400 l AIV (A/Duck/Jiangsu/NJ08/05, 107

          TCID50/0.1 ml) and 25, 5,

          or 1 mg BP5 in 100 l PBS/kg body weight, (iii) 400 l commercially inactivated

          AIV/H9N2 vaccine (an oil-formulated vaccine obtained from Qian Yuan hao

          Co., Ltd., Nanjing, China [107

          TCID50/0.1 ml]) plus 100 l PBS as a positive

          control, or (iv) 500 l PBS as a negative control (Table 1).

          HI assay. On days 14 and 28 postimmunization, serum hemagglutination

          inhibition (HI) antibody titers of each group of chickens were evaluated with an

          HI test based on Hirst’s principle (10). The serum was diluted 10-fold with saline

          before an additional 2-fold dilution with PBS was made. Standard avian in?uenza

          antigen (Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, China) with 4 hemagglutination

          units was then added to each diluted serum sample and mixed for approximay

          15 min. An equal volume of 0.5% chicken red blood cells was added to the

          virus-serum mixture and incubated for 30 to 60 min before the results were read.

          The HI titers were de?ned as the highest serum dilution capable of preventing

          hemagglutination.

          Estimation of antigen-speci?c antibodies (IgG). Sera from chickens were

          collected on days 14 and 28 postimmunization. Speci?c antihemagglutinin (anti-

          HA) IgG of chicken sera was analyzed by ELISA. Brie?y, ELISA plates were

          coated with a puri?ed prokaryote-expressed recombinant JS-1 (A/Chicken/

          Jiangsu/JS-1/2002, H9N2 AIV) HA protein (preserved in our laboratory, 10

          g/ml) (40). Serially diluted chicken sera were then incubated for2hat room

          temperature, followed by a 1-h incubation with horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-

          conjugated goat anti-chicken IgG (GenScript Co., Ltd., China). Titers at half-

          maximal optical densities (OD) were determined by linear interpolation between

          the measured points neighboring the half-maximal OD. Linear interpolation was

          calculated using the logarithm of the titer values. Each serum titration was

          repeated in triplicate.

          Cytokine assays. One day 28 postimmunization, the serum levels of Th1-type

          cytokines (IL-2 and IFN-) in chickens were determined with commercial

          ELISA kits (Cusabio Biotech), whereas Th2-type cytokine (IL-4) was measured

          by another commercial ELISA kit (R&D Systems, United Kingdom). The pro-

          cedure followed the manufacturer’s instructions.

          Lymphocyte proliferation assay and immunophenotyping assay. To detect

          changes in cellular immunity, a peripheral blood lymphocyte proliferation assay

          and an immunophenotyping assay were performed. Fourteen days after the

          second immunization (day 28), the blood samples were collected for lymphocyte

          separation. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were separated as described previ-

          ously, with some modi?cation (11, 28). The cell suspension from the blood was

          layered on Ficoll-Paque lymphocyte separation medium by density gradient

          centrifugation. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were obtained from the interface

          and washed twice with Hanks’ balanced salt solution. After centrifugation, the

          ?nal pellet was resuspended in RPMI 1640 medium containing 5% heat-inacti-

          vated fetal calf serum at a concentration of 2 106

          cells per ml.

          The peripheral blood lymphocyte proliferation assay was performed using a

          modi?ed MTT method as described previously (13, 22). Brie?y, the peripheral

          blood lymphocytes (2 106

          cells/ml) were dispersed and incubated in 96-well

          ?at-bottomed microtiter plates (80 l/well). Another 20 l of concanavalin A

          (ConA; 10 g/ml, positive control), the recombinant JS-1 (A/Chicken/Jiangsu/

          JS-1/2002, H9N2 AIV) HA protein (10 g/ml, speci?c antigen stimulation), or

          RPMI 1640 medium without antigen (negative control) was added to each well,

          and each sample was seeded in four wells. After 44 h of incubation at 39.5°C in

          a5%CO2 incubator, 20 l of MTT (dissolved in PBS, 5 mg/ml) (Sigma) was

          added to each well and the incubation was continued for another 4 h. Then 100

          l of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was added, and incubation was continued for

          an additional 24 h before measurement of OD at 750 nm (OD570) using an

          ELISA reader (Bio-Tek Instruments, VT). Cell viability is expressed as the

          percentage of the OD570 of cells treated with complex over the OD570 of the

          control samples.

          Flow cytometric analysis of peripheral blood lymphocytes was carried out as

          previously described (30). Peripheral blood lymphocytes (2 106

          cells/ml) were

          made complex with the monoclonal antibody phycoerythrin (PE)-labeled anti-

          chicken CD3 and then with PE-labeled anti-chicken CD4 and ?uorescein

          isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated anti-chicken CD8 (Southern Biotechnology)

          for1hat 4°C. PE- and FITC-conjugated isotype controls were also included.

          Cells were analyzed by ?uorescence-activated cell sorting (BD Biosciences).

          Virus challenge experiment. Two weeks after the second vaccination, all chick-

          ens were intranasally challenged with 2 107

          TCID50 of avian in?uenza H9N2

          virus strain JS-1 (A/Chicken/Jiangsu/JS-1/2002) in 0.1 ml. Lungs were collected

          from six chickens from each group at 1, 3, and 5 days after virus challenge (Table

          1). All lung samples were stored at 80°C. Viral copy numbers in lungs were

          determined by using real-time PCR. An RNeasy RNA extraction kit (Invitrogen,

          Norway) was used to prepare total RNA from the lung samples. The RNA was

          reverse transcribed to cDNA by using the reverse transcription system from

          Promega (Germany). A 2-l portion of cDNA was used to amplify the HA gene

          by real-time PCR using one pair of PCR primers: HA- forward, 5-CTACTGT

          TGGGAGGAAGAGAATGGT-3, and HA-reverse, 5-TGGGCGTCTTGAAT

          AGGGTAA-3. PCR primers were designed based on the HA gene sequence of

          avian in?uenza H9N2 virus strain JS-1 (A/Chicken/Jiangsu/JS-1/2002) in

          GenBank (accession no. AY364228). The ampli?cation was performed by using

          SYBR green (ABI, Warrington, United Kingdom) according to the method

          described previously (24), with some modi?cations. The standard curve for

          real-time PCR quanti?cation was constructed using the HA gene in the vector

          pET32a-HA (H9N2), a gift from Qisheng Zheng (Institute of Veterinary Sci-

          ence, Jiangsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences). The pretreatment of the re-

          TABLE 1. Animal groups and the experimental designa

          Group Vaccination on days 0 and 14b

          1 ..........................500 l PBS

          2 ..........................400 l AIVs (107

          TCID50/0.1 ml) 100 l PBS

          3 ..........................400 l AIVs (107

          TCID50/0.1 ml) 100 l BP5

          (25 mg/kg/0.1 ml PBS)

          4 ..........................400 l AIVs (107

          TCID50/0.1 ml) 100 l BP5

          (5 mg/kg/0.1 ml PBS)

          5 ..........................400 l AIVs (107

          TCID50/0.1 ml) 100 l BP5

          (1 mg/kg/0.1 ml PBS)

          6 ..........................400 l H9N2 AIV vaccine (107

          TCID50/0.1 ml)

          100 l PBS

          a

          All chickens were challenged on day 28.

          b

          AIVs, inactivated H9N2 avian in?uenza virus; H9N2 AIV vaccine, commer-

          cial H9N2 avian in?uenza virus vaccine prepared with oil/water as an adjuvant.

          1498 LI ET AL. CLIN.VACCINE IMMUNOL.

           on April 26, 2012 by Huazhong Agricultural University http://cvi.asm.org/ Downloaded from action mixture was carried out at 94°C for 10 min, and then the mixture was

          subjected to 40 cycles of ampli?cation at 95°C for 15 s and at 60°C for 30 s.

          Statistical analysis. Antibody titers, cytokine levels, percentages re?ecting

          lymphocyte proliferation, percentages of CD3, CD3 CD4, and CD3 CD8

          cells in the peripheral blood, and numbers of viral copies in chicken lungs were

          recorded as means standard deviations (SD). Bonferroni correction multiple-

          comparison tests were used to evaluate any differences between groups. Differ-

          ences between means were considered signi?cant at a P of 0.05 or a P of 0.01.

          RESULTS

          BP5 stimulates signi?cant antigen-speci?c immune re-

          sponses. To test antigen-speci?c immune responses to immu-

          nization, chickens were immunized two times with a mixture of

          BP5 and inactivated avian in?uenza viruses (AIVs) or a com-

          mercial AIV (H9N2) vaccine (positive controls) or with PBS

          (negative control). Chickens coimmunized with inactivated

          AIVs and BP5 produced signi?cantly higher hemagglutination

          inhibition (HI) antibody titers (Fig. 1A) (after priming with 25,

          5, and 1 mg/kg [P 0.05 {*}] and boosting with 25 and 5 mg/kg

          [P 0.05 {#}] and 1 mg/kg [P 0.01 {##}]) and anti-HA

          antibody (IgG) titers (Fig. 1B) (after priming with 25 and 5

          mg/kg [P 0.05 {*}] and 1 mg/kg [P 0.01 {**}] and boosting

          with 25 and 5 mg/kg [P 0.05 {#}] and 1 mg/kg [P 0.01

          {##}]) than those immunized with inactivated AIVs alone.

          Compared to chickens immunized with the commercial H9N2

          AIV vaccine (with a combination of oil and water [oil/water] as

          an adjuvant), chickens coadministered inactivated AIVs and

          BP5 also produced signi?cantly higher HI (Fig. 1A) and IgG

          (Fig. 1B) antibody titers (after priming with 1 mg/kg [P 0.05

          {†}] and boosting with 5 mg/kg and 1 mg/kg [P 0.05 {§}]).

          BP5 increases the production of both Th1- and Th2-type

          cytokines. We then tested the levels of Th1 (IL-2 and IFN-)

          and Th2 (IL-4) cytokines upon coimmunization with inacti-

          vated AIV and BP5 in chickens. Compared with restimulation

          with inactivated AIVs alone, coimmunization with inactivated

          AIVs and BP5 remarkably increased the levels of both Th1-

          type (IL-2 and IFN- [P 0.05]) and Th2-type (IL-4 [P

          0.01]) cytokines in chickens, whereas only Th1-type cytokines

          increased with commercially inactivated H9N2 AIV vaccine

          restimulation (Fig. 2).

          BP5 signi?cantly enhances peripheral blood lymphocyte

          proliferation. To investigate the effects of BP5 on peripheral

          lymphocyte proliferation, we collected peripheral lymphocytes

          from chickens treated with different dosages of BP5 coadmin-

          istered with inactivated AIV and treated them with recombi-

          nant JS-1 (A/Chicken/Jiangsu/JS-1/2002, H9N2 AIV) HA pro-

          tein in vitro. When chickens were immunized with inactivated

          AIVs and BP5, a signi?cant proliferative response was ob-

          served (Fig. 3; *, P 0.05, compared with chickens immunized

          with the inactivated AIVs alone; #, P 0.01, compared with

          chickens immunized with PBS; †, P 0.05, compared with

          chickens immunized with the commercially prepared H9N2

          AIV vaccine with oil/water as an adjuvant). The data showed

          that chickens immunized with a combination of BP5 and inac-

          tivated AIVs also induce the highest AIV-speci?c cellular pro-

          liferation, in addition to the humoral responses described

          above.

          FIG. 1. Effects of adding BP5 to the inactivated AIVs on the levels

          of antigen-speci?c HI titers (A) and anti-HA IgG antibodies (B).

          Chicken sera were collected on days 21 and 28 postimmunization, and

          the serum HI titers and IgG titers were analyzed by HI assay and by

          ELISA, respectively. The data presented are means SD of results

          from three replicates. , P 0.05, and , P 0.01 (prime); #, P

          0.05, and ##, P 0.01 (boost), compared to chickens immunized with

          inactivated AIVs alone. †, P 0.05 (prime); §, P 0.05 (boost),

          compared to chickens immunized with the commercial H9N2 AIV

          vaccine.

          FIG. 2. Effect of adding different doses of BP5 to inactivated AIVs

          on Th1/Th2 cytokine production in chicken sera. Chickens were im-

          munized two times, and chicken sera were collected on day 28 postim-

          munization. Cytokine release was measured by using a sandwich

          ELISA method and commercial ELISA kits. The data presented are

          means SD of results from four replicates. , P 0.05; , P 0.01,

          compared to chickens immunized with AIVs alone. †, P 0.01, com-

          pared to chickens immunized with the commercial H9N2 AIV vaccine.

          VOL. 18, 2011 BURSOPENTINE (BP5) AS A NOVEL IMMUNOADJUVANT 1499

           on April 26, 2012 by Huazhong Agricultural University http://cvi.asm.org/ Downloaded from BP5 stimulates both CD4 and CD8 T cells. The percent-

          ages of overall CD3 T cells and their subsets (CD4 T cells

          [CD3 CD4] and CD8 T cells [CD3 CD8]) in the pe-

          ripheral blood lymphocyte populations were signi?cantly in-

          creased in the chickens immunized with a mixture of inacti-

          vated AIV and BP5 (5 mg/kg, P 0.05; 1 mg/kg, P 0.01)

          compared with those in chickens immunized with inactivated

          AIV alone (Table 2). However, CD8 T cells were only mod-

          eray affected by administration of the commercial H9N2

          AIV vaccine. This indicated that BP5 has an adjuvant activity

          in that it promotes the AIV vaccine by stimulating not only

          CD4 T cell proliferation but also CD8 T cell proliferation.

          BP5 signi?cantly promotes immune protection against

          H9N2 AIV challenge. To verify that a killed vaccine in combi-

          nation with BP5 can provide better protection against H9N2

          AIV infection, we applied a real-time PCR assay using SYBR

          green 1 for detection of AIV copies in the lungs of chickens on

          days 1, 3, and 5 after H9N2 AIV challenge. In the assay, the

          dissolution curve showed that the HA primer had a good

          speci?city, and the standard curve results showed that the

          ampli?cation ef?ciency of the HA primer, which could be used

          for detection of virus in lung samples, was 99.89% (data not

          shown). As shown in Table 3, numbers of lung viral copies were

          signi?cantly reduced in the chickens coimmunized with inacti-

          vated AIVs and BP5 compared to those in the chickens im-

          munized with inactivated AIV alone on days 1, 3, and 5 after

          H9N2 AIV challenge (25 mg/kg and 5 mg/kg, P 0.05; 1

          mg/kg, P 0.01). Compared to the number of lung viral copies

          in the chickens immunized with the commercial H9N2 AIV

          vaccine (with oil/water as an adjuvant), lung viral copies were

          also reduced signi?cantly in the chickens coadministered inac-

          tivated AIVs and BP5 (1 mg/kg, P 0.05) (Table 3).

          DISCUSSION

          Many adjuvant approaches have been evaluated for use in

          vaccines. However, since most of the adjuvants used in conju-

          gation with antigen have unacceptable levels of side effects,

          such as toxicity and adverse site reactions, only a few of them

          are used clinically (26, 35). Aluminum-based mineral salts (alu-

          minum adjuvant; alum) have commonly been used in many

          veterinary and human vaccines because of their safety (1), but

          they induce antibody production weakly and are poor at elic-

          iting cell-mediated immune responses (3), which are signi?cant

          drawbacks for their use in vaccines against intracellular para-

          sites and some viruses. The oil-based adjuvants, which are

          common in veterinary vaccines, in contrast, are limited by their

          induction of side effects and adverse site reactions (5, 18, 34).

          Thus, research to ?nd new and optimal adjuvant candidates for

          vaccine formulations has been described in many publications.

          In some of these publications, research on some small peptide

          immunostimulants used for vaccine adjuvant strategies has also

          been reported (2, 8, 36).

          In our previous study, we isolated and puri?ed a novel bursa

          pentapeptide, BP5, which was capable of enhancing antigen-

          speci?c humoral and cell-mediated immune responses in mice

          (19). In the present study, we found that a simple mixture of

          inactivated H9N2 AIVs and BP5 also enhanced humoral and

          cell-mediated immune responses in chickens. When coinjected

          with the model antigen (an inactivated avian in?uenza virus

          [AIV], A/Duck/Jiangsu/NJ08/05 [AIV H9N2 subtype]), BP5

          FIG. 3. BP5 signi?cantly stimulates chicken peripheral blood lym-

          phocyte proliferation. Chickens were immunized two times, and

          chicken peripheral blood lymphocytes were collected on day 28

          postimmunization. Proliferative response was evaluated byMTT assay.

          Data are the means SD of results from four separate experiments.

          , P 0.05, compared to results with PBS alone; #, P 0.05, com-

          pared to results with AIVs alone; †, P 0.05, compared to chickens

          immunized with the commercial H9N2 AIV vaccine.

          TABLE 2. Flow cytometric analysis of CD3 T cells and their

          subsets CD3 CD4 and CD3 CD8 T cells from the

          peripheral blood lymphocytes of immunized chickens

          a

          Treatment

          % of peripheral blood lymphocytes of type:

          CD3 CD3 CD4 CD3 CD8

          PBS 35.15 2.14 14.36 1.89 9.22 1.51

          AIVs 45.99 1.23 20.87 2.13 13.68 2.12

          AIVs 25 mg/kg BP5 48.78 2.86 20.54 1.38 16.87 1.89

          AIVs 5 mg/kg BP5 58.82 2.48* 26.89 1.56* 22.67 1.78*†

          AIVs 1 mg/kg BP5 61.46 1.61**† 30.44 2.24** 25.01 1.53**†

          H9N2 AIV vaccine 56.87 2.31* 28.57 1.79** 16.51 1.35

          a

          Chickens were sacri?ced on day 28 after ?rst immunization, and the periph-

          eral blood lymphocytes were collected for immunophenotyping. The data pre-

          sented are means SD of results from four replicates. *, P 0.05, and **, P

          0.01, compared with chickens immunized with the inactivated AIVs alone. †, P

          0.05, compared with chickens immunized with the commercial H9N2 AIV vac-

          cine.

          TABLE 3. Detection of AIV copies in the lungs of H9N2

          AIV-challenged chickens by a SYBR green 1 real-time PCRa

          Group

          No. of lung viral copies (log 10)/ml

          PBS on day postchallenge:

          135

          PBS 8.6 0.015 7.2 0.036 4.5 0.045

          AIVs 7.1 0.023 5.5 0.024 3.1 0.054

          AIVs 25 mg/kg BP5 5.7 0.034* 4.4 0.028* 1.9 0.027*

          AIVs 5 mg/kg BP5 5.4 0.042* 4.0 0.064* 1.5 0.039*

          AIVs 1 mg/kg BP5 5.0 0.041**† 3.1 0.055**† 0.9 0.034**†

          H9N2 AIV Vaccine 6.0 0.031* 4.3 0.034* 2.2 0.035*

          a

          Lung samples from individual chickens in each group were collected on days

          1, 3, and 5 postchallenge. Each lung sample was diluted to 1 ml with PBS. The

          titers are presented as numbers of copies per ml PBS. The data presented are

          means SD of results from ?ve replicates. *, P 0.05, and **, P 0.01,

          compared to chickens immunized with AIVs alone. †, P 0.05, compared with

          chickens immunized with the commercial H9N2 AIV vaccine.

          1500 LI ET AL. CLIN.VACCINE IMMUNOL.

           on April 26, 2012 by Huazhong Agricultural University http://cvi.asm.org/ Downloaded from induced higher levels of antigen-speci?c hemagglutination in-

          hibition (HI) antibody titers and antigen-speci?c HA antibody

          (IgG) titers in chickens than were induced in chickens immu-

          nized with inactivated avian in?uenza virus alone. Further-

          more, chickens coadministered inactivated AIVs and proper

          concentrations of BP5 (used as an adjuvant) produced signif-

          icantly higher HI and IgG antibody titers than chickens immu-

          nized with the commercial H9N2 AIV vaccine (prepared with

          oil/water as an adjuvant). In some literature, it has been re-

          ported that a single administration of commercial H9N2 AIV

          vaccine in oil emulsion induced higher HI antibody titers

          (about 9 log2) 3 weeks after vaccination than the control (16),

          whereas in other literature, it has been reported that oil adju-

          vant H9N2 AIV vaccine produced HI antibody titers that were

          less than 6 log2 2 weeks after the ?rst vaccination, less than 7.0

          log2 3 weeks after the ?rst vaccination, and less than 8.0 log2 3

          weeks after the second vaccination (17). It is well known that

          various factors, like source of erythrocytes, type of diluent,

          incubation temperature, and incubation period, affect hemag-

          glutination activity, and thereby, they affect the HI titers (12).

          In view of this, the data for HI antibody titers obtained from

          this study are generally consistent with the data reported by

          Lee et al. (17). Although the HI antibody titers induced by the

          commercial AIV vaccine and by BP5 adjuvant-inactivated

          AIVs were not very high in this study, BP5 adjuvant-inacti-

          vated AIVs induced higher HI antibody titers than oil adjuvant

          commercial AIV vaccine. This suggested that BP5 has an ef-

          fective adjuvant activity in vaccines that enhances antigen-

          speci?c humoral immune responses.

          In addition to humoral responses, cellular immunity plays an

          important role in ?ghting in?uenza virus infections (14). In this

          study, cell-mediated immunity was evaluated in vaccinated

          chickens through cytokine analysis and in vitro proliferation

          assay of peripheral blood splenocytes pre- and postimmuniza-

          tion. Currently, special attention is being given to adjuvants

          capable of ef?ciently promoting a Th1-type immune response,

          which is considered the best correlate of a protective immune

          response to infections (32). However, the most powerful Th1-

          promoting adjuvants exhibit some toxicity, which limits their

          clinical use (27). The most remarkable ?nding reported in the

          present study is the demonstration that BP5, coadministered

          with inactivated AIVs, represents an unexpectedly powerful

          adjuvant, not only inducing the production of Th1-type cyto-

          kines (IL-2 and IFN-) but also inducing the production of

          Th2-type cytokines (IL-4). Moreover, in vivo/ex vivo, using

          MTT incorporation to measure cell proliferation and ?ow cy-

          tometric analysis to measure immunophenotyping of T lym-

          phocytes, signi?cant increases in peripheral blood lymphocyte

          proliferation and in the sizes of CD3 T cell populations,

          including CD3 CD4 and CD3 CD8 T cell populations,

          were found in chickens coadministered inactivated AIVs and

          BP5. In contrast, although the levels of cytokines in sera

          and the levels of peripheral blood lymphocyte proliferation

          and CD3 T cell populations were increased in chickens im-

          munized with a commercial, inactivated AIV vaccine (pre-

          pared with oil/water as an adjuvant), levels of only Th1-type

          cytokines increased, and the CD8 T cells were only moder-

          ay affected. These results indicate that BP5 has the potential

          to affect cell-mediated responses and balance Th1- and Th2-

          type immune responses when used as an adjuvant.

          To further evaluate the in?uence of BP5 as an adjuvant on

          the immunity protection provided by inactivated AIVs against

          avian in?uenza virus infection, chickens were challenged intra-

          nasally with avian in?uenza H9N2 virus strain JS-1 (A/Chicken/

          Jiangsu/JS-1/2002) on day 28 after they had been coimmu-

          nized with inactivated AIVs and BP5. At 2 days postchallenge,

          the nonvaccinated chickens that received the challenge virus

          were mildly depressed. No other clinical signs were observed in

          that group or any of the other groups, which is typical of

          low-pathogenicity AIVs in chickens (15, 33). At 5 days post-

          challenge, only the nonvaccinated challenged group had mild,

          grossly detectable lesions in both the respiratory and gastroin-

          testinal tract. As JS-1 H9N2 virus is a low-pathogenicity avian

          in?uenza virus and all challenged chickens survived the infec-

          tions, we used SYBR green 1-based real-time PCR to assess

          the extent of virus infection, monitoring the protection level of

          inactivated AIVs after they were coadministered with BP5.We

          detected the challenge virus in the lungs of the challenged

          chickens on days 1, 3, and 5. Our data indicated that viral

          replication (viral shedding) occurred and that virus shedding

          could be more ef?ciently blocked or reduced after a homolo-

          gous vaccine was coadministered with BP5, which was used to

          vaccinate chickens against the challenge virus. This result sug-

          gests that BP5 has the potential to be used in vaccine formu-

          lations to provide improved protection against H9N2 AIV

          infection in poultry.

          Several small peptides have been synthesized in an effort to

          discover an idealized peptide sequence with signi?cant immu-

          nological adjuvant activity (7, 8). Our previous study revealed

          that B lymphocyte proliferation induced by BP5 is mediated by

          reactive oxygen species generated from thiol auto-oxidation of

          Cys in BP5 (19). We presume that Cys plays an important role

          in the immune functions of BP5. Thus, analogs of BP5, such as

          Gly-Lys-Asp-Val-Tyr, Ala-Lys-Asp-Val-Tyr, and Glu-Lys-Asp-

          Val-Tyr, were also synthesized and used to evaluate their im-

          mune activities in mice and chickens. In the assays, no signif-

          icant immune adjuvant activities of these peptides were

          detected (data not shown). This suggests that the speci?c im-

          mune inducer properties of BP5 are associated with its special

          amino acid sequence. Further research on the relationship

          between the structure and the immune activity of BP5 will

          contribute new insights into the mechanisms of adjuvant activ-

          ity and may lead to the development of a practical application

          in vaccine design. Further studies are also needed to further

          compare the effects of BP5 and other adjuvants.

          In summary, we demonstrated that BP5 enhanced the avian

          in?uenza virus-speci?c cell-mediated and humoral immune re-

          sponses induced by inactivated AIVs. Furthermore, intramus-

          cular immunization with a mixture of inactivated AIVs and

          BP5 enhanced protection against a homologous avian in?u-

          enza virus challenge by reducing viral replication in chicken

          lungs. This study indicates that BP5 possesses adjuvant activi-

          ties and that it may be used as a new experimental reagent for

          immuno-adjuvant uses.

          ACKNOWLEDGMENT

          The present study was supported by a grant from the National

          Agriculture Special Research Project (grant 200803020).

          VOL. 18, 2011 BURSOPENTINE (BP5) AS A NOVEL IMMUNOADJUVANT 1501

           on April 26, 2012 by Huazhong Agricultural University http://cvi.asm.org/ Downloaded from REFERENCES

          1. Bowersock, T. L., and S. Martin. 1999. Vaccine delivery to animals. Adv.

          Drug Deliv. Rev. 38:167–194.

          2. Charoenvit, Y., N. Goel,M.Whelan, K. S. Rosenthal, and D. H. Zimmerman.

          2004. CEL-1000—a peptide with adjuvant activity for Th1 immune re-

          sponses. Vaccine 22:2368–2373.

          3. Cox, J. C., and A. R. Coulter. 1997. Adjuvants, a classi?cation and review of

          their modes of action. Vaccine 15:248–256.

          4. Domingo, E. 1997. Rapid evolution of viral RNA genomes. J. Nutr. 127:

          958S–961S.

          5. Droual, R., A. A. Bickford, and G. J. Cutler. 1993. Local reaction and

          serological response in commercial layer chickens injected intramuscularly in

          the leg with oil-adjuvanted Mycoplasma gallisepticum bacterin. Avian Dis.

          37:1001–1008.

          6. Foss, D. L., and M. P. Murtaugh. 2000. Mechanisms of vaccine adjuvanticity

          at mucosal surfaces. Anim. Health Res. Rev. 1:3–24.

          7. Fritz, J. H., et al. 2004. The arti?cial antimicrobial peptide KLKLLLLLKLK

          induces predominantly a TH2-type immune response to co-injected antigens.

          Vaccine 22:3274–3284.

          8. Gagnon, L., M. DiMarco, R. Kirby, B. Zacharie, and C. L. Penney. 2000.

          D-LysAsnProTyr tetrapeptide: a novel B-cell stimulant and stabilized bursin

          mimetic. Vaccine 18:1886–1892.

          9. Hilleman, M. R. 1998. Six decades of vaccine development: a personal

          history. Nat. Med. 4:507–514.

          10. Hirst, G. K. 1942. The quantitative determination of in?uenza virus and

          antibodies by means of red cell agglutination. J. Exp. Med. 75:49–64.

          11. Hung, C. M., et al. 2009. Gingyo-san enhances immunity and potentiates

          infectious bursal disease vaccination. Evid. Based Complement Alternat.

          Med. 2011:1–10.

          12. Hussain, M., M. D. Mehmood, A. Ahmad, M. Z. Shabbir, and T. Yaqub.

          2008. Factors affecting hemagglutination activity of avian in?uenza virus

          subtype H5N1. J. Vet. Anim. Sci. 1:31–36.

          13. Kong, X., Y. Hu, R. Rui, D. Wang, and X. Li. 2004. Effects of Chinese herbal

          medicinal ingredients on peripheral lymphocyte proliferation and serum

          antibody titer after vaccination in chicken. Int. Immunopharmacol. 4:975–

          982.

          14. Kreijtz, J. H., et al. 2007. Primary in?uenza A virus infection induces cross-

          protective immunity against a lethal infection with a heterosubtypic virus

          strain in mice. Vaccine 25:612–620.

          15. Lee, C. W., et al. 2000. Sequence analysis of the hemagglutinin gene of H9N2

          Korean avian in?uenza virus and assessment of the pathogenic potential of

          isolate MS96. Avian Dis. 44:527–535.

          16. Lee, D. H., et al. 2011. H9N2 avian in?uenza virus-like particle vaccine

          provides protective immunity and a strategy for the differentiation of in-

          fected from vaccinated animals. Vaccine 29:4003–4007.

          17. Lee, D. H., et al. 2011. Inactivated H9N2 avian in?uenza virus vaccine with

          gel-primed and mineral oil-boosted regimen could produce improved im-

          mune response in broiler breeders. Poult. Sci. 90:1020–1022.

          18. Leenaars, M., M. A. Koedam, C. F. Hendriksen, and E. Claassen. 1998.

          Immune responses and side effects of ?ve different oil-based adjuvants in

          mice. Vet. Immunol. Immunopathol. 61:291–304.

          19. Li, D. Y., et al. 2011. Immunomodulatory activities of a new pentapeptide

          (Bursopentin) from the chicken bursa of Fabricius. Amino Acids 40:505–515.

          20. Liu, M. A. 1998. Vaccine developments. Nat. Med. 4:515–519.

          21. Maines, T. R., et al. 2008. Pathogenesis of emerging avian in?uenza

          viruses in mammals and the host innate immune response. Immunol. Rev.

          225:68–84.

          22. Mosmann, T. 1983. Rapid colorimetric assay for cellular growth and survival:

          application of proliferation and cytotoxicity assays. J. Immunol. Methods

          65:55–63.

          23. Mosmann, T. R., and R. L. Coffman. 1989. TH1 and TH2 cells: different

          patterns of lymphokine secretion lead to different functional properties.

          Annu. Rev. Immunol. 7:145–173.

          24. Ong, W. T., A. R. Omar, A. Ideris, and S. S. Hassan. 2007. Development of

          a multiplex real-time PCR assay using SYBR Green 1 chemistry for simul-

          taneous detection and subtyping of H9N2 in?uenza virus type A. J. Virol.

          Methods 144:57–64.

          25. Peiris, M., et al. 1999. Human infection with in?uenza H9N2. Lancet 354:

          916–917.

          26. Petrovsky, N., and J. C. Aguilar. 2004. Vaccine adjuvants: current state and

          future trends. Immunol. Cell Biol. 82:488–496.

          27. Proietti, E., et al. 2002. Type I IFN as a natural adjuvant for a protective

          immune response: lessons from the in?uenza vaccine model. J. Immunol.

          169:375–383.

          28. Qiu, Y., et al. 2007. Immunopotentiating effects of four Chinese herbal

          polysaccharides administered at vaccination in chickens. Poult. Sci. 86:2530–

          2535.

          29. Saito, T., et al. 2001. Characterization of a human H9N2 in?uenza virus

          isolated in Hong Kong. Vaccine 20:125–133.

          30. Sasai, K., et al. 1997. Analysis of splenic and thymic lymphocyte subpopu-

          lations in chickens infected with Salmonella enteritidis. Vet. Immunol. Im-

          munopathol. 59:359–367.

          31. Schellack, C., et al. 2006. IC31, a novel adjuvant signaling via TLR9, induces

          potent cellular and humoral immune responses. Vaccine 24:5461–5472.

          32. Singh, M., and D. O’Hagan. 1999. Advances in vaccine adjuvants. Nat.

          Biotechnol. 17:1075–1081.

          33. Soda, K., S. Asakura, M. Okamatsu, Y. Sakoda, and H. Kida. 2011. H9N2

          in?uenza virus acquires intravenous pathogenicity on the introduction of a

          pair of di-basic amino acid residues at the cleavage site of the hemagglutinin

          and consecutive passages in chickens. Virol. J. 8:64–72.

          34. Steiner, J. W., B. Langer, and D. L. Schatz. 1960. The local and systemic

          effects of Freund’s adjuvant and its fractions. Arch. Pathol. 70:424–434.

          35. Uto, T., et al. 2007. Targeting of antigen to dendritic cells with poly(-

          glutamic acid) nanoparticles induces antigen-speci?c humoral and cellular

          immunity. J. Immunol. 178:2979–2986.

          36. Wang, C., et al. 2008. Bursin as an adjuvant is a potent enhancer of immune

          response in mice immunized with the JEV subunit vaccine. Vet. Immunol.

          Immunopathol. 122:265–274.

          37. Wareing, M. D., and G. A. Tannock. 2001. Live attenuated vaccines against

          in?uenza; an historical review. Vaccine 19:3320–3330.

          38. Webster, R. G., and T. L. Thomas. 1993. Ef?cacy of equine in?uenza vaccines

          for protection against A/Equine/Jilin/89 (H3N8)—a new equine in?uenza

          virus. Vaccine 11:987–993.

          39. World Health Organization. 1999. In?uenza. Wkly. Epidemiol. Rec. 74:111.

          40. Zheng, Q. S., et al. 2005. Prokaryotic expression and the establishment of a

          putative indirect ELISA assay for the HA gene of avian in?uenza virus H9N2

          subtype. Virol. Sin. 20:293–297.

          1502 LI ET AL. CLIN.VACCINE IMMUNOL.

           on April 26, 2012 by Huazhong Agricultural University http://cvi.asm.org/ Downloaded from 

           

          慧嘉生物您實(shí)驗(yàn)身邊的好伙伴

          為客戶提供“zui高質(zhì)量的產(chǎn)品”和“zui的服務(wù)”

          歡迎廣大客戶咨詢,另有大量宣傳海報(bào)和小禮品贈(zèng)送。

          www.biohj.com  

              真:

          382603320      1284882975

              箱:sale@biohj.com

          會(huì)員登錄

          ×

          請(qǐng)輸入賬號(hào)

          請(qǐng)輸入密碼

          =

          請(qǐng)輸驗(yàn)證碼

          收藏該商鋪

          X
          該信息已收藏!
          標(biāo)簽:
          保存成功

          (空格分隔,最多3個(gè),單個(gè)標(biāo)簽最多10個(gè)字符)

          常用:

          提示

          X
          您的留言已提交成功!我們將在第一時(shí)間回復(fù)您~
          撥打電話
          在線留言
          思茅市| 河东区| 溆浦县| 平顶山市| 房产| 揭东县| 怀仁县| 治县。| 佛山市| 武义县| 甘德县| 凉城县| 怀远县| 油尖旺区| 咸丰县| 东阿县| 五家渠市| 桑植县| 龙岩市| 呼伦贝尔市| 江西省| 新建县| 志丹县| 故城县| 双辽市| 潮安县| 湖口县| 泰宁县| 浮山县| 会理县| 久治县| 濮阳市| 海城市| 青海省| 崇左市| 平顺县| 曲麻莱县| 婺源县| 商丘市| 林甸县| 兰溪市|