Affiliation:
1. Special Pathogens Laboratory, Department of Virology
1 Laboratory of Animal Experimentation
2. Tokyo,Japan
3. Laboratory of Infectious
Disease Pathology, Department of Pathology, National
Institute of Infectious Diseases
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The potential threat of smallpox as a bioweapon has led to the production
and stockpiling of smallpox vaccine in some countries. Human monkeypox,
a rare but important viral zoonosis endemic to central and western
Africa, has recently emerged in the United States. Thus, even though
smallpox has been eradicated, a vaccinia virus vaccine that can induce
protective immunity against smallpox and monkeypox is still invaluable.
The ability of the highly attenuated vaccinia virus vaccine strain
LC16m8, with a mutation in the important immunogenic membrane protein
B5R, to induce protective immunity against monkeypox in nonhuman
primates was evaluated in comparison with the parental Lister strain.
Monkeys were immunized with LC16m8 or Lister and then infected
intranasally or subcutaneously with monkeypox virus strain Liberia or
Zr-599, respectively. Immunized monkeys showed no symptoms of monkeypox
in the intranasal-inoculation model, while nonimmunized controls showed
typical symptoms. In the subcutaneous-inoculation model, monkeys
immunized with LC16m8 showed no symptoms of monkeypox except for a mild
ulcer at the site of monkeypox virus inoculation, and those immunized
with Lister showed no symptoms of monkeypox, while nonimmunized
controls showed lethal and typical symptoms. These results
indicate that LC16m8 prevents lethal monkeypox in monkeys, and they
suggest that LC16m8 may induce protective immunity against
smallpox.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
101 articles.
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