UBRISA

View Item 
  •   Ubrisa Home
  • Theses and Dissertations
  • Faculty of Humanities Theses and Dissertations
  • Masters Dissertations
  • View Item
  •   Ubrisa Home
  • Theses and Dissertations
  • Faculty of Humanities Theses and Dissertations
  • Masters Dissertations
  • View Item
    • Login
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Heterologous expression of LSDV immunogenic epitopes as TMV Coat Protein fusions in Nicotiana benthamiana plants

    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    motlhale_Unpublished (Msc)_2015.pdf (3.106Mb)
    Date
    2016-07-15
    Author
    Motlhale, Melitah
    Link
    Unpublished
    Type
    Masters Thesis/Dissertation
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Lumpy skin disease (LSD) is an economically important disease in Botswana. Currently the disease has no cure. In Botswana this disease is endemic; it has serious economic effects on beef export and the tourism industry. The only way of controlling LSD is by vaccination, separation of healthy animals from the diseased and killing or eliminating the diseased animals. Current strategies in vaccine production use intact or inactivated pathogen strains to induce immunity, as well as subunit vaccines which are commercially produced in yeast or mammalian cell cultures. Vaccine production is expensive. This study aimed at production of a candidate vaccine for lumpy skin disease using tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) as a vector for coat protein fusion production. The major immunodominant region in the lumpy skin disease virus (LSDV) is the P32 protein; two epitopes (LSDV-A and LSDV-B) from this protein were selected and used as antigens for the vaccine production. The epitopes were fused to the CP of TMV then cloned into a TMV based Agrobacterium compatible binary vector (pJL TRBO). Six weeks old Nicotiana benthamiana plants were agroinfiltrated with the recombinant TMV (rTMV). The rTMV was extracted from the plants three weeks post infection using polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation method. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rtPCR) of raw material from infected leaves showed that the rTMV was not expressed in the plants. The virus extracts showed that the LSDV epitopes were not successfully expressed in the plants; the epitopes were not attached to TMVCP. Western blots and ELISA showed that the rTMV was not able to elicit an immune response by reacting to anti-LSDV bovine sera. The study indicated the potential to develop a system to locally generate cheap and effective vaccines against LSDV even though there are some limitations that are to be eliminated.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10311/1467
    Collections
    • Masters Dissertations [74]

    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
    Contact Us | Send Feedback
    Theme by 
    @mire NV
     

     

    Browse

    All of UBRISA > Communities & Collections > By Issue Date > Authors > Titles > SubjectsThis Collection > By Issue Date > Authors > Titles > Subjects

    My Account

    > Login > Register

    Statistics

    > Most Popular Items > Statistics by Country > Most Popular Authors