A summary of the IFN-γ analysis is shown in Table 1. Two weeks after final vaccination a statistically significant increase of IFN-γ secretion
by ADV-stimulated PBMC was observed in all vaccinated groups of animals compared with unstimulated control. The level of IFN-γ produced by PBMC obtained from previously vaccinated pigs after stimulation with ADV was at least 14-fold click here higher than the mean IFN-γ basal production (unstimulated PBMC) and was at least 110 pg mL−1. The significantly higher concentration of IFN-γ was noted especially in group 2 (vaccinated at 10 and 14 weeks), where it reached 448 ng mL−1 (60-fold higher than basal production). In the next sampling period, at 20 weeks of life, the amounts of IFN-γ in supernatant were higher than 110 pg mL−1 only in groups 2 (vaccinated at 10 and 14 weeks), 4 (vaccinated at 12 weeks) and 6 (vaccinated at 1 and 12 weeks). These results are in agreement with data observed in the proliferation assay. In groups 3 and 5 (vaccinated at 1 week and at 1 and 8 weeks of age, respectively) the concentration of IFN-γ was only six- and twofold higher than in the mean basal secretion and reached 50 and 30 pg mL−1, respectively, whereas in the remaining vaccinated groups the level of this cytokine was still high
(at least 17 times higher than in unstimulated control). In the unvaccinated group (group 1) there was no significant increase of IFN-γ concentration after ADV stimulation in any sampling period. Dabrafenib The highest concentration of investigated cytokine in culture supernatants was observed in group 2 (vaccinated at 10 and 14 weeks of age). There was a positive correlation between IFN-γin vitro production and proliferation response of PBMC stimulated with ADV (r=0.6, P≤0.05). In vitro ADV stimulation did not induce production of IL-4 by PBMC in either immune or nonimmune pigs. In supernatants from stimulated and unstimulated
cultures the level of IL-4 was undetectable (<15.6 pg mL−1). Aujeszky's disease is still a significant infectious disease in Poland and vaccination of animals is an important element of AD eradication. As a result, many animals possess MDA, which may disturb the immune GNA12 response to vaccine antigen. The amount of passively acquired antibodies transmitted to a given piglet depends on several factors: colostral intake, number of suckling piglets and antibody titers of sows (Andries et al., 1978). In the present study the level of MDA against gB antigen was high and similar in piglets from all six groups. Lack of specific T-cell response in 40% animals vaccinated once in the presence of a relatively high level of MDA (group 3, vaccinated at 8 weeks of age) may suggest that MDA suppresses not only humoral but also T-CMI and that for development of cellular immunity in 100% of vaccinated animals in the presence of MDA a single dose of vaccine was insufficient.