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A Producer-Friendly Brucellosis Vaccine

Animal caretaker Terry Krausman raised this bison from a 1-day-old calf for use
in research to develop a brucellosis vaccine for bison.
(K7078-7) |
A major hurdle has been cleared in the long battle against brucellosis, a
contagious bacterial disease that costs U.S. cattle producers some $30 million
annually.
The latest weapon is a new vaccine called RB51. Its name is taken from a
strain of the Brucella abortus bacterium that causes brucellosis. But
unlike long-standing vaccines that use B. abortus strain 19, the RB51
vaccine doesn't stimulate the animals immune system to produce antibodies
that interfere with the diagnosis of B. abortus.
The presence of such antibodies in subsequent blood tests has sometimes been
viewed as a sign of infection, rather than of vaccinationmaking some
cattle producers reluctant to vaccinate their herds.
USDAs Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) granted a
provisional license in February 1996 to Colorado Serum Company in Denver to
make and sell a vaccine containing RB51. ARS researchers at the National Animal
Disease Center (NADC) in Ames, Iowa, have a vested interest in the success of
this new vaccine, which is gradually being adopted as the official vaccine to
replace B. abortus strain 19.
Brucellosis, or Bangs disease as it's often called, reduces cattle
fertility, causes abortions, and reduces milk production in beef and dairy
cattle. People can become infected if they handle, slaughter, or consume
unpasteurized milk products from infected cattle. In humans, the disease is
called undulant fever and causes flulike symptoms, weakness, and loss of
appetite and weight.
No treatment or prophylactic drug has ever been developed for cattle
brucellosis.
For over 50 years, veterinarians have tested cattle. Those animals found to
be infected were separated from the herd or slaughtered.
Since the early 1940s, vaccines based on B. abortus strain 19
have been the chief defense against this devastating disease.
But the problem with using strain 19 in a vaccine has always been that
it induced an antibody response, making identification of truly infected
animals more difficult, says ARS veterinarian Steven C. Olsen.
Olsen is a member of the research team responsible for developing the new
vaccine. The RB51 strain was first identified and isolated in the early 1980's
by Gerhardt Schurig, a microbiologist at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University in Blacksburg, Virginia.
Lack of antibody response isn't the only advantage offered by the RB51
vaccine. In studies conducted by veterinarians and researchers in Alabama,
Kansas, Georgia, Texas, and Florida, the vaccine appeared clinically safe for
use in pregnant cows. Only one pregnant animal in 1,000 aborted after
vaccination with the live RB51 vaccine.
To help APHIS speed up brucellosis eradication, the ARS research team of
Olsen, Mark G. Stevens, Mitchell V. Palmer, Shirley M. Halling, Betsy J.
Bricker, and Norman F. Cheville, who was formerly with ARS, were responsible
for developing an improved vaccine.
These researchers performed years of work behind the
scenesvaccinating calves, raising them to breeding age, waiting until
they were pregnant, and exposing them to the bacteria to see if the vaccination
worked, says veterinary medical officer Carole A. Bolin, who is in charge
of NADCs Zoonotic Diseases Research Unit.
The problem of brucellosis extends well beyond the boundaries of this
countrys cattle ranches. About 50 percent of the bison leaving
Yellowstone National Park during the winter to forage in cattle-populated areas
of Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho test positive for brucellosis, according to
Olsen.
He and fellow ARS researchers are participating in a multiagency program to
study the disease in free-ranging bison in Yellowstone. Olsen is cooperating in
the program with APHIS; the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Parks;
and the U.S. Department of the Interiors National Park Service and the
Biological Resources Division (formerly the National Biological Service), U.S.
Geological Survey. The Park Service hopes to eliminate the disease from
Yellowstone bison by 2010. By Linda Cooke
Steven C.
Olsen is in the USDA ARS Bacterial Diseases of Livestock Research Unit at
the National Animal Disease Center, P.O. Box 70, Ames, Iowa 50010; phone (515)
663-7230.
"A Producer-Friendly Brucellosis Vaccine" was published in
the October
1996 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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