Despite intensive vaccination campaigns, outbreaks of Newcastle disease (ND) have been frequently reported in China, especially of genotype VII that first emerged in the late 1990s. Given the dire need for vaccines against the circulating genotype VII virus, we developed an alternative method to recover a highly virulent recombinant GM (rGM) virus that involves a T7 system with a hammerhead ribozyme sequence introduced downstream of the T7 promoter. By changing the F0 polybasic cleavage site RRQKR↓F to the monobasic GRQGR↓L, we generated a mutant virus (rGM-VIIm) that was found to be highly attenuated in chickens. The rGM-VIIm virus not only produced fourfold higher hemagglutination assay (HA) titers than the parental virus, but also exhibited genetic stability after 15 continuous passages in specific-pathogen-free (SPF) embryonated eggs. Whether live or inactivated, rGM-VIIm and LaSota vaccines can protect vaccinated birds from GM challenge infection. However, live and inactivated rGM-VIIm vaccines reduced virus shedding of the homologous challenge virus significantly better than the LaSota virus vaccine did. Altogether, our results suggest that rGM-VIIm vaccines could aid in the control of ND in China.
Keywords: Genotype VII; Newcastle disease virus; Reverse genetics; Vaccine.