2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143094
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Pathology of Equine Influenza virus (H3N8) in Murine Model

Abstract: Equine influenza viruses (EIV)—H3N8 continue to circulate in equine population throughout the world. They evolve by the process of antigenic drift that leads to substantial change in the antigenicity of the virus, thereby necessitating substitution of virus strain in the vaccines. This requires frequent testing of the new vaccines in the in vivo system; however, lack of an appropriate laboratory animal challenge model for testing protective efficacy of equine influenza vaccine candidates hinders the screening … Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Earlier studies on various Influenza A viruses viz. H3N8 in BALB/c mice [20,21], H3N2 virus in ferrets [12] and H9N2 in broiler chickens [28] had similar findings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…Earlier studies on various Influenza A viruses viz. H3N8 in BALB/c mice [20,21], H3N2 virus in ferrets [12] and H9N2 in broiler chickens [28] had similar findings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Group C animals were not given any treatment and served as unimmunized -uninfected control ( Table 1). The vaccine dosage -15 μg of viral protein in immunodiffusion (SRD) content, total protein content of virus was utilized in the current study [20,21]. Group A mice were immunized with the vaccine formulation -15 μg of viral protein in μl intramuscularly on both the flanks on day 0 of the animal experimentation followed by booster doses -μg of viral protein on day 21 and 35 post immunization.…”
Section: Immunization and Challengementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Previous studies have shown that serial passaging of the influenza virus in nonimmunized animals can lead to increased pathogenicity and transmission of the virus (Guarnaccia et al,2013,Li et al,2014,Murcia et al,2012,Pavulraj et al,2015. Moreover, the infectivity of virus serially passaged without selection pressure of vaccine antibodies also increases (Jin et al,2018,Shanmuganatham et al,2016.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%