Infectivity and antigenicity of Anaplasma marginale from tick cell culture
1989
Hidalgo, R.J. | Palmer, G.H. | Jones, E.W. | Brown, J.E. | Ainsworth, A.J.
The infectivity and immunogenicity of Anaplasma marginale grown in a tick cell culture from embryonic Dermacentor variabilis ticks were assessed in splenectomized and intact calves, respectively. Culture 1 consisted of the cell line inoculated with midguts of adult ticks infected with the Mississippi isolate of A marginale and dissected 5 to 10 days after repletion and detachment from an experimentally infected calf. Cultures 2 and 3 consisted of the cell line inoculated with midguts of ticks infected with the Virginia isolate of the organism. Inoculum for culture 2 was derived from nymphal ticks dissected 5 to 10 days after repletion and detachment from the infected calf; inoculum for culture 3 was midguts from adult ticks that were fed as nymphs, allowed to molt in the laboratory and dissected 21 to 24 days after molting. In trial 1, cultures 1, 2, and 3 were maintained at pH 6.9 and incubated at 28 C; in trial 2, cultures 1 and 3 were maintained at pH 7.4 and incubated at either 28 C or 37 C. Cultures 1, 2, and 3 failed to induce infection when injected IV and SC into 6 calves in 2 separate trials. Prechallenge sera from these calves reacted with 2 purified Anaplasma antigens in the ELISA, but failed to react in the complement-fixation test. Results of a trial to use cultures 1 and 3 in combination with an oil-in-water adjuvant to immunize intact calves against A marginale were inconclusive. However, prechallenge sera from immunized calves reacted with the 2 purified Anaplasma initial body antigens in the ELISA but failed to react in the complement-fixation text. When reacted against electrophoretically separated A marginale initial body proteins disrupted by sodium dodecyl sulfate, prechallenge serums from calves used in infectivity and immunization trials reacted with a majority of the antigens precipitated by an animal experimentally infected by inoculation of infected blood. This offers additional evidence that A marginale was maintained in the tick culture for up to 11 months and that the organism in culture antigens similar, if not identical, to the erythrocytic stage of the rickettsial agent. The importance of the laboratory culture of A marginale is discussed.
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