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Immunogenic characterization of vaccines based on Haemophilus parasuis Nagasaki strain, OmpP2, OmpP5 and OmpD15, in colostrum-deprived pigs experimentally challenged with the same strain.

Three recombinant outer membrane proteins (rOmps) from the Haemophilus parasuis Nagasaki strain (serovar 5 reference strain), rOmpP2, rOmpP5 and rOmpD15, which have previously shown protection against H. parasuis infection in mice, were cloned, expressed and evaluated as vaccine antigens in colostrum-deprived pigs. When these animals were immunized with these rOmps and were later challenged intratracheally with 108 CFUs of the Nagasaki strain, no protection was seen in terms of survival, clinical signs, pathological results and recovery of H. parasuis. We hypothesized that a possible explanation for this lack of protection could be the low number of epitopes accessible to the immune system as a consequence of their poor exposure on the bacterial surface so that the immune response would not be able to protect against experimental infection by H. parasuis when a fully susceptible animal model, such as pigs, was used.

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