Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line

This short paper on yellow head virus Type-1 (YHV-1) of shrimp describes preliminary research on the potential for using YHV-1 attenuated in insect cells to protect shrimp against yellow head disease (YHD). YHV-1 can cause severe mortality in the cultivated shrimp Penaeus (Penaeus) monodon and Penae...

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Main Author: Gangnonngiw W.
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Article
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/81308
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spelling th-mahidol.813082023-05-16T00:21:54Z Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line Gangnonngiw W. Mahidol University Agricultural and Biological Sciences This short paper on yellow head virus Type-1 (YHV-1) of shrimp describes preliminary research on the potential for using YHV-1 attenuated in insect cells to protect shrimp against yellow head disease (YHD). YHV-1 can cause severe mortality in the cultivated shrimp Penaeus (Penaeus) monodon and Penaeus (Litopenaeus) vannamei. No practical vaccination has been reported. The C6/36 mosquito cell cultures inoculated with YHV-1 become positive by PCR and by immunocytochemistry (immunopositive) for up to 30 split-cell passages. Shrimp injected with homogenates from low-passage cultures die from typical YHV-1 disease while shrimp injected with homogenates from high passage cultures do not, even though they become PCR positive and immunopositive for YHV-1. This suggested that viral attenuation had occurred during insect-cell passaging, and it opened the possibility of using homogenates from high-passage insect cultures as a vaccine against YHV-1. To test this hypothesis, homogenates from 30th-passage, YHV-positive cultures were injected into shrimp followed by challenge with virulent YHV-1. Controls were injected with homogenate from 30th-passage, naive (normal stock) insect-cell cultures. No shrimp mortality occurred following injection of either homogenate, but shrimp injected with the YHV-1 homogenate became both RT-PCR positive and immunopositive. Upon challenge 10 days later with YHV-1, mortality in shrimp injected with naive insect-cell homogenate was 100% within 7 days post-challenge while 100% mortality in the YHV-1 homogenate group did not occur until day 9 post-challenge. Kaplan-Meier log-rank survival analysis revealed that survival curves for the two groups were significantly different (p < 0.001). The cause of delay in mortality may be worthy of further investigation. 2023-05-15T17:21:54Z 2023-05-15T17:21:54Z 2023-12-01 Article Fish and Shellfish Immunology Reports Vol.4 (2023) 10.1016/j.fsirep.2023.100084 26670119 2-s2.0-85151580922 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/81308 SCOPUS
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Agricultural and Biological Sciences
spellingShingle Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Gangnonngiw W.
Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line
description This short paper on yellow head virus Type-1 (YHV-1) of shrimp describes preliminary research on the potential for using YHV-1 attenuated in insect cells to protect shrimp against yellow head disease (YHD). YHV-1 can cause severe mortality in the cultivated shrimp Penaeus (Penaeus) monodon and Penaeus (Litopenaeus) vannamei. No practical vaccination has been reported. The C6/36 mosquito cell cultures inoculated with YHV-1 become positive by PCR and by immunocytochemistry (immunopositive) for up to 30 split-cell passages. Shrimp injected with homogenates from low-passage cultures die from typical YHV-1 disease while shrimp injected with homogenates from high passage cultures do not, even though they become PCR positive and immunopositive for YHV-1. This suggested that viral attenuation had occurred during insect-cell passaging, and it opened the possibility of using homogenates from high-passage insect cultures as a vaccine against YHV-1. To test this hypothesis, homogenates from 30th-passage, YHV-positive cultures were injected into shrimp followed by challenge with virulent YHV-1. Controls were injected with homogenate from 30th-passage, naive (normal stock) insect-cell cultures. No shrimp mortality occurred following injection of either homogenate, but shrimp injected with the YHV-1 homogenate became both RT-PCR positive and immunopositive. Upon challenge 10 days later with YHV-1, mortality in shrimp injected with naive insect-cell homogenate was 100% within 7 days post-challenge while 100% mortality in the YHV-1 homogenate group did not occur until day 9 post-challenge. Kaplan-Meier log-rank survival analysis revealed that survival curves for the two groups were significantly different (p < 0.001). The cause of delay in mortality may be worthy of further investigation.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
Gangnonngiw W.
format Article
author Gangnonngiw W.
author_sort Gangnonngiw W.
title Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line
title_short Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line
title_full Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line
title_fullStr Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line
title_full_unstemmed Failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (YHV) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line
title_sort failed shrimp vaccination attempt with yellow head virus (yhv) attenuated in an immortal insect cell line
publishDate 2023
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/81308
_version_ 1781415551584698368