Evaluation of plant-produced Clostridium perfringens type D epsilon toxoid in a vaccine against enterotoxaemia in sheep
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Date
Authors
Mokoena, Tinyiko
Chakauya, Ereck
Crampton, Michael
Weyers, Boet
Tselanyane, Malefa
Tsekoa, Tsepo
Chikwamba, Rachel
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
AOSIS OpenJournals
Abstract
Enterotoxaemia (pulpy kidney) is a common bacterial disease of sheep caused by Clostridium
perfringens type D epsilon toxin. It has mortality rates of up to 30% in non-vaccinated animals.
Current vaccines from whole cell cultures are expensive to manufacture and can induce local
inflammatory responses in sheep. They usually have reduced immunogenicity because of the
difficulty of standardising the inactivation step in vaccine manufacturing. In the current study,
we evaluated the safety and potency of a recombinant plant-made epsilon toxoid protein
(r-Etox) as an affordable and safer alternative vaccine for developing countries. Results of
injection site reactions, rectal temperature and toxin neutralisation test in single and prime–
boost inoculations of mice, guinea pigs and sheep suggest that the product is not toxic to
animals and could protect sheep against enterotoxaemia.
Description
Keywords
Sheep, Vaccines, Mortality, Enterotoxaemia (pulpy kidney)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Mokoena, T., Chakauya, E.,
Crampton, M., Weyers, B.,
Tselanyane, M., Tsekoa, T.
et al., 2017, ‘Evaluation of
plant-produced Clostridium
perfringens type D epsilon
toxoid in a vaccine against
enterotoxaemia in sheep’,
Onderstepoort Journal of
Veterinary Research 84(1),
a1271. https://DOI.
org/10.4102/ojvr.v84i1.1271.