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ARS Home » Midwest Area » Ames, Iowa » National Animal Disease Center » Infectious Bacterial Diseases Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #158721

Title: EXPERIMENTAL MYCOBACTERIUM AVIUM SUBSP. PARATUBERCULOSIS INFECTION OF CALCES:EARLY INDUCTION OF A CONCURRENT HUMORAL AND CELLULAR IMMUNE RESPONSE

Author
item Waters, Wade
item Miller, Janice
item Palmer, Mitchell
item Robbe Austerman, Suelee
item JONES, D - IOWA STATE UNIV
item KOISTINEN, K - IOWA STATE UNIV
item STEADHAM, E - IOWA STATE UNIV
item HAMILTON, M - WASH STATE UNIV
item DAVIS, W - WASH STATE UNIV
item Bannantine, John

Submitted to: Meeting Abstract
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 11/9/2003
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Johne's disease of cattle is widespread and causes significant economic losses for producers due to decreased production and poor health of affected animals. The chronic nature of the disease and the lack of a reproducible model of infection hinder research efforts. In the present study, instillation of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis into the tonsillar crypts of neonatal calves resulted in peripheral colonization as detected by ante-mortem culture of feces and post-mortem (320 d postchallenge) culture of intestinal tissues. Antigen-specific blastogenic, IFN- g, and nitric oxide responses by blood mononuclear cells from infected calves exceeded prechallenge responses beginning 194 d postchallenge. Upon in vitro stimulation with paratuberculosis antigens, CD4+ cells from infected calves proliferated, produced IFN-g, and increased expression of CD26 and CD45RO (i.e., indicative of an activated memory phenotype). Utilizing a lipoarabinomannan-based ELISA, specific serum immunoglobulin was detected as early as 134 d postchallenge and generally increased after this time point. Two antigens of ~50-kDa and ~60-kDa were particularly immunodominant early in infection as shown by immunoblot with serum collected within 2 weeks postchallenge. Findings indicate that the intratonsillar inoculation route will prove useful as an experimental model for paratuberculosis infection. Additionally, this study confirms that mycobacteria-specific antibody is detectable early in the course of experimental Johne's disease, even preceeding the development of specific cell-mediated responses.