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Cytotoxicity Assay As a Potential Alternative Method for Animal Testing for Batch Release of Italian Fish Autogeneous Vaccines

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Journal Open Vet J
Date 2023 May 30
PMID 37251262
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Abstract

Background: Vaccination is widely used in fish aquaculture for three primary reasons: to prevent bacterial disease spreading, minimize antibiotic use and fight antibiotic resistance. Vaccine production is an expensive and consuming process, mainly in terms of money, resources, and animals for quality control. The replace, reduce, and refine (3Rs) philosophy suggests developing and validates alternative methods to animal testing for scientific purposes, even for biologicals and vaccines.

Aim: The current study explored the potential use of mouse and fish cells in the toxicity grade assessment through different methods, as an alternative assay to residual toxicity tests for autogenous fish vaccine control.

Methods: BF2 and L929 cell lines were exposed to vaccine dilutions in two different ways of administration and toxicity grade was recorded by MTS assay, compared to the gold standard test.

Results: Autogenous vaccines (AVs) caused no reactions in the test. In the assay, the different toxicity grade recorded was statistically significant between the cell lines adopted and the AVs way of administration.

Conclusions: Data obtained represent the first application of 3Rs method to fish AVs produced in Italy, more investigations are needed to collect solid results and standardize new methods for vaccine quality control.

Citing Articles

Recombinant Factor C as an In Vitro Assay for the Residual Pathogenicity Evaluation of Veterinary Autogenous Vaccines.

Di Paolo A, Liberti R, Anzalone L, Colabella C, Felici A, Severi G Vet Sci. 2024; 11(12).

PMID: 39729013 PMC: 11680121. DOI: 10.3390/vetsci11120673.

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