Construction and Immunogenicity Evaluation of a Recombinant Infectious Bronchitis Virus H120-Based Vaccine in Broiler Chickens
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Infectious Bronchitis Virus is one of several major viral infections in poultry, affecting the respiratory, reproductive, and renal systems, and causing significant economic losses worldwide. Current vaccines, including the H120 strain, provide limited cross-protection against emerging variants, underscoring the need for improved vaccine strategies. In this study, the complete genome of IBV H120 was divided into 12 fragments, synthesized, and assembled using the Golden Gate Assembly (GGA) method. The recombinant virus (rH120) was successfully rescued in chicken fibroblast cells and propagated in embryonated chicken eggs. Growth kinetics in embryonated chicken eggs revealed similar replication patterns between rH120 and the original H120 strain. In broiler chickens, rH120 replicated efficiently as confirmed by viral RNA detection in throat and cloacal swabs, and induced a stronger antibody response by 14 days post-infection. The rH120 virus proved to be genetically stable, infectious, and immunogenic, indicating that GGA-based reverse genetics is an effective system for IBV vaccine development.