Abstract
AbstractFoot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a pathological disease caused by the foot- and-mouth disease virus (FMDV), which mainly affects cloven-hoofed animals. This study was conducted to a meta-analysis and experiment on the effect of bacteriophages used in the development of FMDV vaccines. A systematic search was conducted for the collection of the protection effect for the phage-based FMDV vaccine using sensitive search strategies. The extracted data were analyzed using Rev-Man 5.4 software. This experiment used the T7 phage to express the capsid protein VP1 of the OHM-02 strain, and the recombinant VP1 phage was termed OHM-T7. Antibodies and cytokines levels were assessed after immunizing BALB/C mice with OHM-T7. The results showed that a total of 115 articles were retrieved, and 4 of them met the inclusion criteria. There was no heterogeneity with I2 = 0%, 20% or 43%. We used a fixed-effect model for meta-analysis, and the results showed a protective effect on FMDV between the phage group and control group (P<0.01) and between FMDV group and control group (P<0.01). Furthermore, when the phage group was compared to the FMDV group, there was also no significant difference (P>0.05). After successfully obtained the ohm-t7 strain and immunized the mice, it could induce high levels of IFN-γ levels in mice with little effect on IL-4 levels. OHM-T7 could be used to detect antibodies produced by mice immunized with different FMDV antigens and produce high levels of anti-FMD antibodies. In summary, these results showed the potential of phage-based FMDV vaccines in FMDV prevention.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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