Evaluation of live attenuated plague vaccines in Praomys (Mastomys) natalensis.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

A live attenuated Yersinia pestis vaccine designated EV76-51f, which had previously been shown to be pathogenic in vervet monkeys but not in guinea pigs, was tested in the multimammate mouse Praomys (Mastomys) natalensis. Doses of 10(6) viable organisms inoculated subcutaneously as either a lyophilized suspension or an agar-grown culture resulted in vaccination fatalities in Praomys but not in white mice. Hemagglutinating antibodies to the fraction 1 antigen were not stimulated by doses lower than 10(4) viable organisms. Agar-grown cultures of the vaccine gave better protection against a virulent Y. pestis challenge than did a lyophilized suspension. All Praomys vaccinated with a dose of 10(6) agar-grown EV76-51f protected against a virulent challenge, whereas even doses up to 10(8) lyophilized bacilli failed to give complete protection. The pathogenicity of a live attenuated plague vaccine derived from the Y. pestis EV76 vaccine strain can be detected in Praomys (Mastomys) natalensis, a rodent species highly susceptible to plague. This animal species may therefore be valuable for the testing of live attenuated plague vaccines before they are tested in costly nonhuman primates.

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