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Adabtation of Rabies Virus Isolates to High Growth Titer and Determination of Patologenicity to Develop Canine in Ethiopia

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dc.contributor.author Mengesha,Abebe
dc.contributor.author Hurisa,Birhanu
dc.contributor.author Tesfaye,Tihitina
dc.contributor.author Lemma,Hailu
dc.contributor.author Niguse,Dereje
dc.contributor.author G/wold,Gashaw
dc.contributor.author Urga,Kelbessa
dc.date.accessioned 2022-11-24T10:12:27Z
dc.date.available 2022-11-24T10:12:27Z
dc.date.issued 8/24/2014
dc.identifier.citation Aga, Abebe & Hurisa, Birhanu & Tesfaye, Tihitina & Lemma, Hailu & Woldemichael, Dereje & Wold, Gashaw & Urga, Kelbessa. (2014). Adaptation of Local Rabies Virus Isolates to High Growth Titer and Determination of Pathogenicity to Develop Canine Vaccine in Ethiopia. The Open Vaccine Journal. 5. 1000245.
dc.identifier.uri http://172.21.6.100:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/105
dc.description.abstract Rabies is a zoonotic viral disease which causes acute encephalitis in humans and animals. The case is most severe in developing countries where cell culture derived anti-rabies vaccines are unaffordable or the available nervous tissue-derived vaccines are of questionable immunogenicity and may cause neurological complications. The aim of this research was to adapt local rabies virus isolates on BHK-21 and to study pathogenicity to intramuscular route of inoculation for canine vaccine development. The viruses were isolated from rabid dogs’ brain and human saliva, and adapted to Swiss albino mice brain and cell lines by several blind passages. By titration, a minimum of 106.5TCID50/ml (in vitro) and 104.5MICLD50/0.03 ml (in vivo) virus titer were obtained. For pathogenicity study, mice were inoculated intramuscularly with 250MICLD50/0.1 ml of each adapted virus isolate and observed for 45 days. Only two virus isolates, human origin sululta (HOS) and dog origin (DO) caused 12.5% death. This can show the phylogroup origin of the viruses indicating phylogroup I origin of these virus isolates with decline in virulence. Decline in pathogenicity may be due to adaptation of the viruses to mice brain and cell lines to increase virus infectivity titer. Generally, the exact genetic relationship with fixed rabies virus strain should be studied by molecular techniques and canine anti-rabies vaccine develops from locally isolated viruses.
dc.format.extent 1-4
dc.subject ADAPTATION
dc.subject CELL CULTURE VACCINE
dc.subject LOCAL ISOLATES
dc.subject PATHOGENICITY RABIES
dc.title Adabtation of Rabies Virus Isolates to High Growth Titer and Determination of Patologenicity to Develop Canine in Ethiopia
dc.type Journal Article
ep.identifier.status Open Access
ep.identifier.status Open Access
ep.identifier.doi http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2157-7560.1000245
ep.journal Journal of Vaccines & Vaccination
ep.issue 5
ep.volume 5


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