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Effects of three antiarthritic drugs on fibronectin and keratan sulfate synthesis by cultured canine articular cartilage chondrocytes
1992
Steinmeyer, J. | Burton-Wurster, N. | Lust, G.
Because articular chondrocytes are a target for drugs that can influence the integrity of cartilage, we investigated the effects of 3 antiarthritic drugs, glycosaminoglycan polysulfate, diclofenac-Na, and S-adenosylmethionine sulfate p-toluenesulfonate on total protein, fibronectin, and DNA synthesis, as well as on extradomain-A fibronectin and keratan sulfate content. Glycosaminoglycan polysulfate stimulated dose-dependent incorporation of [35S]methionine into protein and fibronectin, whereas incorporation of [3H]thymidine into DNA was unaffected. Total fibronectin, extradomain-A fibronectin, and keratan sulfate content were high in chondrocyte cultures treated with glycosaminoglycan polysulfate. In contrast, fibronectin and DNA synthesis, as well as extradomain-A fibronectin and keratan sulfate content were unaffected by diclofenac-Na. S-adenosylmethionine decreased dose-dependently the synthesis of fibronectin, as well as the content of fibronectin and keratan sulfate. At the highest concentration of S-adenosylmethionine tested, findings suggest that cell viability was impaired as assessed by the release of lactate dehydrogenase into the media.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Evaluation of a subunit vaccine for bovine adenovirus type 3
1992
York, I.A. | Thorsen, J.
The hexon subunit of bovine adenovirus serotype 3 (BAV-3) was purified by use of anion-exchange chromatography. A vaccine composed of the purified hexon in immune-stimulating complexes was administered and induced high titer of virus-neutralizing antibody in rabbits and calves.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Immunity in swine inoculated with larvae or extracts of a pig isolate and a sylvatic isolate of Trichinella spiralis
1991
Marinculic, A. | Gamble, H.R. | Urban, J.F. | Rapic, D. | Zivicnjak, T. | Smith, H.J. | Murrell, K.D.
Inoculation of swine with a sylvatic isolate of Trichinella spiralis, designated T s nativa, resulted in low numbers of muscle larvae, compared with muscle larvae accumulation in swine inoculated with a pig type of T s spiralis. Despite low infectivity of T s nativa for swine, primary inoculation resulted in high levels of immunity against challenge infection with T s spiralis. This immunity was expressed in accelerated expulsion of challenge adults from the intestine and reduced numbers of muscle larvae. Pigs inoculated with T s nativa developed cellular and humoral responses similar to those in pigs inoculated with T s spiralis. However, in immunoblots, sera from pigs inoculated with T s nativa recognized additional proteins in muscle larvae excretory-secretory (ES) products, compared with sera from pigs inoculated with T s spiralis. Active immunization of pigs with ES products from T s nativa resulted in numerically higher, but not significantly different levels of immunity, compared with pigs immunized with ES from T s spiralis. The highest levels of immunity were obtained in pigs immunized with a T s spiralis newborn larval extract. The combination of ES products and newborn larval extract did not result in additive levels of immunity. These results indicate that the major immune effector response to Trichinella sp in pigs is against the newborn larvae, regardless of the genetic type of Trichinella sp.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Comparison of phenotypic characteristics of Salmonella spp isolated from healthy and ill (infected) chickens
1991
Nolan, L.K. | Wooley, R.E. | Brown, J. | Payeur, J.B.
Phenotypic characteristics of 12 paired, Salmonella serotypes isolated from healthy and ill chickens were compared. Variables compared included antibiotic resistance profiles, production of colicins and siderophores, mannose-sensitive hemagglutination of erythrocytes, resistance to serum complement, carbon source utilization, presence and transmissibility of R plasmids, and invasiveness in primary chicken kidney cell culture. Differences were found between pairs for utilization of carbon sources, mannose-sensitive hemagglutination of erythrocytes, and invasiveness in cell culture.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Efficacy of a pseudorabies virus vaccine based on deletion mutant strain 783 that does not express thymidine kinase and glycoprotein I
1991
Oirschot, J.T. van | Moormann, R.J.M. | Berns, A.J.M. | Gielkens, A.L.J.
The vaccine efficacy of a genetically engineered deletion mutant strain of pseudorabies virus, strain 783, was compared with that of the conventionally attenuated Bartha strain. Strain 783 has deletions in the genes coding for glycoprotein I and thymidine kinase. In experiment 1, which had a 3-month interval between vaccination and challenge exposure, strain 783 protected pigs significantly (P < 0.05) better against virulent virus challenge exposure than did the Bartha strain. The growth of pigs vaccinated with strain 783 was not arrested, whereas that of pigs vaccinated with the Bartha strain was arrested for 7 days. Of 8 pigs given strain 783, 4 were fully protected against challenge exposure; none of the pigs given strain Bartha was fully protected. In experiment 2, which had a 3-week interval between vaccination and challenge exposure, the growth of pigs vaccinated with strain 783 was arrested for 3.5 days, whereas that of pigs vaccinated with the Bartha strain was arrested for 6 days. In experiment 3, pigs with moderate titer of maternal antibodies were vaccinated twice IM or once intranasally with either strain 783 or Bartha and were challenge-exposed 3 months after vaccination. Pigs given strain 783 twice IM were significantly (P < 0.05) better protected than were the other pigs. They had growth arrest of only 6 days, compared with 9 days for pigs of other groups, and shed less virus after challenge exposure. Results of this study indicate that the vaccine based on the deletion mutant strain 783 is more efficacious than is the Bartha strain of pseudorabies virus.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Inhibition of lymphocyte blastogenesis by whey
1991
Barta, O. | Barta, V.D. | Crisman, M.V. | Akers, R.M.
Bovine whey samples were evaluated by use of lymphocyte-transformation tests to determine their effect on lymphocyte blastogenesis. Whey samples from mammary glands with clinical mastitis strongly inhibited DNA synthesis and blastogenesis in lymphocytes stimulated with mitogens or dividing because of bovine leukemia virus infection. Whey samples from apparently healthy glands either did not inhibit lymphocyte DNA synthesis or inhibited it to a lesser degree than did whey from mastitic glands. Degree of inhibition was dose-dependent. The molecules causing inhibition were noncytotoxic and underwent minimal binding to the lymphocytes. Inhibitory molecules were susceptible to various proteolytic and glycolytic enzymes, indicating a glycoprotein-like structure. Whey inhibited incorporation of thymidine if it was in the cell cultures during the early stages of stimulation. Incubation of lymphocytes in whey that inhibited thymidine incorporation did not affect DNA synthesis in subsequent culturing of the same cells without whey. Degree of inhibition was affected by the method of whey preparation.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Use of two enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays to monitor antibody responses in swine with experimentally induced infection with porcine epidemic diarrhea virus
1991
Nieuwstadt, A.P. van | Zetstra, T.
A blocking ELISA was developed to detect antibodies directed against porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV). The PEDV antigen was first incubated with dilutions of test sera. Any antigen that was not blocked by antibodies in the serum was assayed in a double-antibody sandwich ELISA, using 2 monoclonal antibodies directed against different antigenic sites on PEDV as capture and detecting antibodies, respectively. The blocking ELISA was compared with a fixed-cell ELISA that used monolayers of Vero cells infected with PEDV prototype strain CV777 as a solid phase and a conjugate of an IgG-specific monoclonal antibody for antibody detection. Pigs were inoculated with PEDV strain CV777 or 1 of 2 field isolates, and antibody responses were measured by use of the 2 tests. Antibodies were detected by the blocking ELISA as early as postinoculation day 7 and, by the fixed-cell ELISA, as early as postinoculation day 14. From day 14 on, antibody titers for both tests correlated highly. Titers for the fixed-cell ELISA were 5.4 times higher than those for the blocking ELISA. The latter technique is easier to perform and discriminates well between infected and noninfected pigs, which makes this test useful for routine diagnosis and serologic surveys of porcine epidemic diarrhea.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Effects of flunixin meglumine on endotoxin-induced prostaglandin F2 alpha secretion during early pregnancy in mares
1991
Daels, P.F. | Stabenfeldt, G.H. | Hughes, J.P. | Odensvik, K. | Kindahl, H.
The role of prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) in embryonic loss following induced endotoxemia was studied in mares that were 21 to 44 days pregnant. Thirteen pregnant mares were treated with a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, flunixin meglumine, to inhibit the synthesis of PGF2 alpha caused by Salmonella typhimurium endotoxin given IV. Flunixin meglumine was administered either before injection of the endotoxin (group 1, -10 min; n = 7), or after endotoxin injection into the mares (group 2, 1 hour, n = 3; group 3, 2 hours, n = 3); 12 pregnant mares (group 4) were given only S typhimurium endotoxin. In group 4, the secretion of PGF2 alpha, as determined by plasma 15-keto-13,14-dihydro-PGF2 alpha concentrations, was biphasic, initially peaking at 30 minutes followed by a second, larger peak approximately 105 minutes after the endotoxin was given IV. When flunixin meglumine was administered at -10 minutes, synthesis of PGF2 alpha was inhibited for several hours, after administration of flunixin meglumine at 1 hour, the second secretory surge of PGF2 alpha was blocked, and administration of the drug at 2 hours did not substantially modify the secretion of PGF2 alpha. Plasma progesterone concentrations were unchanged after endotoxin injections were given in group 1. In group 2, progesterone values decreased < 2 ng/ml and remained low for several days. In group 3 and group 4, progesterone concentrations decreased to values < 0.5 ng/ml by 48 hours after endotoxin injections were given. Pregnancy continued in all 7 mares in group 1; in group 2, pregnancy continued in 2 of 3 mares; and in group 3, none of the 3 mares was pregnant by 4 days after endotoxin administration. The abortifacient effect of endotoxemia in mares < 2 months pregnant is mediated indirectly through the secretion of PGF2 alpha; compromised luteal activity and inadequate progesterone secretion are the primary causes of fetal death. Although flunixin meglumine administration can be used to prevent loss of pregnancy in cases of endotoxemia, it must be initiated at an early stage of the endotoxemia, that is, when clinical signs are often not yet apparent.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Antibody response to glycoprotein I in maternally immune pigs exposed to a mildly virulent strain of pseudorabies virus
1991
Oirschot, J.T. van | Daus, F. | Kimman, T.G. | Zaane, D. van
To study the antibody response to glycoprotein I (gI) of pseudorabies virus (PRV) in maternally immune pigs, 3 groups of 6 pigs were given low doses of the mildly virulent Sterksel strain of PRV at 3 and 11 weeks of age. Group A consisted of seronegative pigs; groups B and C consisted of pigs with maternal antibodies deficient of antibodies to gI. At 3 weeks of age, 3 pigs of each group were inoculated intranasally with 10(2.5) plaque-forming units (groups A and B), or with 10(3.5) plaque-forming units (group C) of PRV. The 3 other pigs in each group were contact-exposed to the inoculated pigs. In group A, 4 of 6 pigs shed virus and all developed antibodies to gI of PRV and produced PRV-specific IgM and virus-neutralizing antibodies. In groups B and C, 10 pigs shed virus and all developed low and inconsistent titers of gI antibodies, whereas only 3 pigs produced PRV-IgM antibodies with low titers. Thus, after PRV infection of pigs with high concentrations of maternal antibodies deficient of gI antibodies, the antibody responses to PRV were severely inhibited. The pigs were reinoculated with 10(3) plaque-forming units of the same virus 8 weeks after the first inoculation. The pigs in group A did not respond at all, as they were immune. The pigs in groups B and C shed considerable amounts of virus. Three pigs had a clear secondary antibody response to gI, whereas the others developed an early to normal antibody response to gI. None of the pigs mounted a secondary neutralizing antibody response to PRV. We concluded that inoculation of pigs having high titers of gI-deficient maternal antibodies with low doses of a mildly virulent PRV, induced low to undetectable concentrations of antibodies to gI.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Characterization of an attenuated strain of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, serotype 1
1990
Rosendal, S. | MacInnes, J.I.
Pleuropneumonia is an important disease of swine caused by Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae. Putative virulence determinants include capsule, lipopolysaccharide, and cytotoxin. We studied the virulence and virulence determinants of 2 strains: CM5 and CM5A of serotype 1. Strain CM5 was isolated from a pig with pleuropneumonia and passaged once in vitro; strain CM5A was a substrain of CM5 passaged 70 times in vitro. Pigs challenge exposed to an aerosol of 1.3 x 10(7) colony-forming units of CM5/ml died within 30 hours; pigs challenge exposed to an aerosol of 1.6 X 10(8) colony-forming units of CM5A/ml survived. The average thickness of the capsular layer was 137 nm in strain CM5 and 53 nm in strain CM5A in bacteria treated with homologous antibody and examined by transmission electron microscopy. Similarly, capsular material binding polycationic ferritin was found in colonies of strain CM5, but not in strain CM5A. The ratio of hexosamine to protein in extracted capsule of CM5 was more than twice that of CM5A. The polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic profile of the lipopolysaccharide, outer membrane proteins, and whole cell proteins did not differ between the 2 strains. Also, the amount of cytotoxin or endotoxin produced by the 2 strains during the logarithmic growth phase was not different. The electrophoretic profile of restriction endonuclease digested DNA was similar, with the exception of bands in the 750- and 620-basepair regions. It was concluded that attenuation of strain CM5A during in vitro passage was a result of reduced capsule production and that encapsulation is an important virulence determinant of A pleuropneumoniae, serotype 1.
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