Publication | Open Access
Protection against feline leukemia by vaccination with a subunit vaccine
66
Citations
25
References
1981
Year
VaccinologyVaccinationVeterinary VaccineVaccine DevelopmentVaccine ResearchMedicineImmunologyVeterinary SciencePathologyVirologyEffective VaccineTherapeutic VaccineVaccine TestingVaccine DesignSaturation DensityImmunotherapyLower Antibody LevelsSubunit Vaccine
An effective vaccine against feline leukemia virus infection has been developed by the collection and concentration of tissue culture medium harvested from a tumor cell line. Lymphoid cells were grown to near saturation density in a normal growth medium and then transferred to a serum-free medium. The serum-free medium was collected, concentrated, and evaluated for its vaccine potential. Cats receiving the vaccine emulsified in complete Freund adjuvant developed high antiviral and antitumor titers and were protected (81%) against virus challenge. Cats receiving the vaccine without an adjuvant developed lower antibody levels and lower protection (53%) from viremia. Age-matched and litter-matched controls developed no antibody to test antigens before the challenge, and 100% became persistently viremic after the challenge. Vaccination with the soluble tumor cell antigen vaccine proved successful in preventing the induction of feline leukemia virus infection.
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