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Field Evidence of Fasciola hepatica-Mediated Modulation of Antibody Responses to Foot-and-Mouth Disease Vaccination in Buffaloes
Abstract
Background: Fasciola hepatica (F. hepatica) infection reduces antibody avidity to foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) vaccination in cattle despite preserved total antibody levels. However, its effect on vaccine-induced immunity in water buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis), which contribute to FMDV maintenance in endemic settings, has not been investigated. Objectives: To evaluate the effect of natural F. hepatica infection on the magnitude and functional quality
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Background: Fasciola hepatica (F. hepatica) infection reduces antibody avidity to foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) vaccination in cattle despite preserved total antibody levels. However, its effect on vaccine-induced immunity in water buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis), which contribute to FMDV maintenance in endemic settings, has not been investigated. Objectives: To evaluate the effect of natural F. hepatica infection on the magnitude and functional quality of the FMDV–specific antibody response in buffaloes under field conditions. Methods: Two buffalo herds (n = 50 each) were classified by infection status using coproparasitological analysis and serology. All animals were vaccinated within the national foot-and-mouth disease control programme, with the last dose administered 264 days before sampling. Serum neutralising titres, total antibodies by liquid-phase blocking ELISA, IgG levels, and IgG avidity to the A24/Cruzeiro vaccine strain were determined. Results: F. hepatica-infected buffaloes exhibited consistent decreases across all vaccine-induced antibody parameters. Neutralising titres were reduced approximately two-fold, IgG avidity by about 38 percent, IgG levels by about 36 percent, and liquid-phase blocking ELISA titres by about 1.6-fold compared with non-infected animals. Conclusions: This study provides the first field evidence that fasciolosis is associated with changes in the magnitude and quality of vaccine-induced humoral responses following FMDV vaccination in water buffaloes, indicating that F. hepatica infection may influence the interpretation of post-vaccination serological monitoring in this species under endemic field conditions.
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Author
Sala, Juan Manuel;
Wilda, Maximiliano;
Miraglia, Maria Cruz;
Castillo, Mariangeles;
Perez Filgueira, Daniel Mariano;
Freire, Teresa;
Capozzo, Alejandra;
Fuente
Vaccines 14 (1) : 36. (January 2026)
Date
2026-01
Editorial
MDPI
ISSN
2076-393X
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INTA/2023-PD-L01-I113, Herramientas de estudio de la Patogenia e Inmunidad en agentes infecciosos y tóxicos que aporten a la sustentabilidad de la producción pecuaria en el marco de Una Salud
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