Serological studies of the self-cure reaction in sheep infected with Haemonchus contortus

1960 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 595 ◽  
Author(s):  
EJL Soulsby ◽  
DF Stewart

The serological reactions which take place during self-cure of sheep infected with Haemonchus contortus were investigated by complement fixation, haemagglutination, and the Ouchterlony agar diffusion precipitin techniques. In addition, a test to detect incomplete antibodies was applied to certain sera. Absorption tests demonstrated that the antibodies detected by the complement fixation test and the haemagglutination test could be differentiated. Evidence is presented to show that the main antigenic stimulation at self-cure is derived from substances released by larvae during the third ecdysis.

1950 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 285 ◽  
Author(s):  
DF Stewart

All antigen was developed to detect circulating antibodies by means of the complement fixation test in sheep infested with Haemonchus contortus and Trichostrongylus spp. Extraction of worm material at 100°C. for 10 minutes was found to be the most satisfactory method for the preparation of antigens. Potent antigens were prepared from young adult H. contortus, from third-stage infective larvae, and from the eggs. Old mature adult H. contortus yielded antigens of low potency. No significant difference was found between the potency of antigens prepared from male and female adult H. contortus collected from the same sheep. Both adult Trichostrongylus spp. and third-stage infective larvae consistently yielded antigens of high potency. No significant difference was found in the results obtained with larval or adult H. contortus antigens, adjusted to the same potency and tested with natural H. contortus antisera. H. contortus and Trichostrongylus spp. absorbed the antiserum to each other. It was shown that a lipid was an essential constituent of the boiled antigen in the complement fixation reaction with natural antisera. Lipid-free antigens from H. contortus failed to react with natural antisera. The lipid was not antigenic when injected into rabbits. The carbohydrate fraction of H. contortus did not fix complement in the presence of natural antisera and was not antigenic when injected into rabbits. The lipid fraction of a variety of nematode parasites reacted with natural antisera to H. contortus infestation. Similar lipid fractions of two species of trematodes did not react with natural antisera to H. contortus infestation. Normal saline suspensions of the lipid-free material from a variety of helminths showed a greater degree of specificity when tested with artificially prepared antisera than did the lipid fractions.


1950 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 413 ◽  
Author(s):  
DF Stewart

In infestation of sheep with Trichostrongylus spp., both the intake of larvae and infestation with adult worms stimulated the production of antibodies. The character of the antibody response in infestation with Trichostrongylus spp. thus differed from that caused by Haemonchus contortus. Sera of sheep dying from infestation with Trichostrongylus spp. were negative to the complement fixation test. It was found that older sheep responded serologically earlier and more vigorously to infestation with Trichostrongylus spp. than did young sheep. Subsequent doses of larvae of Trichostrongylus spp. elicited a more rapid and grester serological response, even in young sheep, than an initial dose of larvae. Previous infestation with H. contortus did not result in resistance to Trichostrongylus spp., whereas previous infestation with Trichostrongylus spp. heightened the resistance of sheep to subsequent infestation with the same species. It is concluded that the relative resistance of older sheep to Trichostrongylus spp. is due, a t least in part, to an earlier immunological response which is strengthened by subsequent doses of larvae. When infective larvae of Trichostrongylus spp. were superimposed upon an existing infestation of the same species, the egg count declined ;apidly and the development of the superimposed larvae resisted Doses of infective larvae of Trichostrongylus spp. had no apparent effect on the egg counts of sheep infested with H. contortus.


1969 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. F. W. Goodwin ◽  
Ruth G. Hodgson ◽  
P. Whittlestone ◽  
Rosemary L. Woodhams

SUMMARYHysterectomy-produced, colostrum-deprived pigs, reared in special isolation accommodation, were infected with enzootic pneumonia and later challenged with the same strain of the disease. Both the original infections and the subsequent challenges were made with intranasal inoculations of suspensions of ground pneumonic lung, but there was no evidence to suggest that any mycoplasma other than the J strain of Mycoplasma suipneumoniae was involved.Pigs that had recovered from the disease were strongly immune to challenge, in that they developed virtually no lung lesions when inoculated with lung suspensions that produced extensive lesions of enzootic pneumonia in control animals. This was the case, even when the pigs were as young as 16 days old when first infected and were not challenged until up to 60 weeks later.Sera from these pigs taken before infection, about 2–3 weeks after infection, at various times after natural recovery, and before and after challenge were examined using the metabolic-inhibition test, the indirect-haemagglutination test and the complement-fixation test.The metabolic-inhibition test proved of little value, because non-specific inhibitory substances were present in the sera of some pigs both before and after infection: these substances inhibited the growth of Mycoplasma hyorhinis, Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Mycoplasma gallisepticum as effectively as M. suipneumoniae. Sometimes the non-specific inhibition was reduced by heating the sera at 56° C. for 30 min., but at other times it was not, which suggests that at least two types of non-specific inhibitors were present.Apart from one pig, all the sera that were expected to be negative for antibodies against M. suipneumoniae proved to be so by the indirect-haemagglutination test. Titres of less than 1/5 were obtained in this test using the sera from pigs killed 12–22 days after infection, but high titres were obtained 16–60 weeks after infection. It was not possible to say whether these titres correlated with immunity.All the pre-infection sera when examined by the complement-fixation test had titres of less than 1/10, but by 12–22 days after infection over half the serum samples had titres of 1/40 or more, and titres of 1/80–1/640 were obtained at 4 and 9 months after infection. There was some evidence to show that these titres declined more rapidly than the titres obtained in the indirect-haemagglutination test; for they were very low at 60 weeks after infection, at which time the indirect-haemagglutination titres were still high.It seemed, therefore, that these two serological tests were measuring different aspects of the post-infection response. Also, because the complement-fixation titres were very low in two pigs that were shown to be powerfully immune, these titres did not appear to correlate with immunity.Our work with the metabolic-inhibition test and the complement-fixation test has benefited from discussions with Dr D. Taylor-Robinson and Mr A. S. Wallis, respectively. We are grateful to Drs H. P. Chu, R. H. Leach and D. Taylor-Robinson for the reference sera and the culture mentioned in the text. Most of the expenses of this work, including the salary of two of the authors (R. G.H. and R.L.W.), were met by a grant from the Agricultural Research Council.


1956 ◽  
Vol 30 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 129-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. J. L. Soulsby

Antigens were prepared by low temperature methods to preserve “functional” antigen. These antigens showed marked cross reactivity and were satisfactory in complement fixation tests.The passive haemagglutination test using “functional” antigen gave titres which were higher than those obtained with the complement fixation test. High antibody titres were observed in sheep naturally infested with nematodes and a relationship between antibody titre and egg count was demonstrated.


1953 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 311-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. G. P. Stoker

1. The haemolytic complement-fixation test and the conglutinating complement-absorption test, as well as the agglutination reaction and the antiglobulin sensitization test, have been used to study a change which occurs during egg adaptation of the Christie strain of R. burneti.2. Antigens were prepared from yolk sacs of the third to the ninth passages inclusive. Irrespective of numbers of rickettsiae, antigens from the third and fourth passage failed to fix complement with homologous (human) antiserum, unless the latter was in very low dilution. From the fifth passage, however, antigens fixed complement with high dilutions of the same antiserum and thus resembled the classical Henzerling strain antigen.3. Third-passage antigen failed to fix conglutinating as well as haemolytic complement with high serum dilutions. The agglutination reaction and antiglobulin test, however, showed that third-passage antigen absorbed antibody almost as well as ninth-passage and Henzerling strain antigens.4. It was not possible to find out if the change in behaviour was due to a true antigenic variation or to non-specific hindrance of complement absorption. Heating failed to alter the behaviour of the antigens and the results of absorption tests were inconclusive.


Author(s):  
A. I. Zavgorodniy ◽  
S. A. Pozmogova ◽  
N. V. Goncharova ◽  
M. V. Kalashnyk ◽  
V. V. Bilushko

The paper presents results of the study of epizootic blood sera in the complement fixation test (CFT) with paratuberculous antigen. Blood sera were sampled from the cattle and goats. The antigen was produced from the culture filtrate of Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) in the laboratory for tuberculosis study. The aim of the present study was to clarify the epizootic situation concerning Johne’s disease among the dairy cattle in different regions of Ukraine. To achieve this aim the blood sera from cattle and goats were collected from farms in different regions of Ukraine. Those sera samples were studied in the complement fixation test with the use of paratuberculous antigen that was produced from the culture filtrate of MAP. The above mentioned blood sera were collected from the cattle that had positive allergic reactions on the use of tuberculin (PPD) for mammals. Those animals belonged to the free from tuberculosis and paratuberulosis milk farms. The study of obtained samples of blood sera was conducted in the accordance with the methodological guidelines “Laboratory diagnostics of paratuberculosis” (shutter. NMR FEFU pr. No. 1, dated December 19, 2014). There were studied 1098 blood sera samples from cattle. In addition to this, investigation was conducted on 24 samples of blood sera from goats. As the result of conducted study it was found that 17 samples of blood sera contained specific antibodies against MAP (serum solution 1:10). These blood sera collected from the cattle belonging to 4 farms in Poltava, Donetsk and Khmelnitsky regions. Along with this it was obtained 9 uncertain results in compliment fixation test that was conducted between paratuberculous antigen (ACF) and blood sera from those 4 farms. The results of monitoring studies indicate that M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis pathogen circulates in studied farms. This can lead to the complication of the epizootic situation regarding paratuberculosis and contribute to the spreading of this pathogen to other free from MAP infection farms. There are no anti-paratuberculosis antibodies in blood serum from goats. It is necessary to conduct annual monitoring serological studies of productive dairy cattle and imported animals in order to clarify and control epizootic situation concerning paratuberculosis on the territory of Ukraine


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-62
Author(s):  
S. A. Garaba ◽  
U. Imogie

THE stability of wet T1 contagious bovine plenropneumonia (CBPP) Vaccine stored at 4°C was studied. Two large batches of the vaccines were stored at 4°C for up to 5 months. From the third month of storage, the vaccines were used to vac­cinate CBPP-free animals. The immune levels of the animals were monitored by complement fixation test (CET) and challenge trial. The results indicated that all the vaccinated animals produced reasonable an­tibody titres even after 5 months storage. Also, all the animals vaccinated with vaccines stored between 3 to 5 months resisted infection by contact while ail the incubated and control animals came down with the disease. The results indicated that the vaccine could actually be stored for up to 5 months at 4°C before use.


1958 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 565-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edith Mankiewicz

The place of two serological techniques, the agar diffusion precipitation reaction and the complement fixation test in the classification of chromogenic acid-fast bacilli, is described. Both techniques reveal evidence of overlapping of antigens as between mycobacteria belonging to pathogenic and to saprophytic strains.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document