Development of a serodiagnostic test for bovine tuberculosis necessitates an understanding of the humoral immune responses of animals following infection with Mycobacterium bovis. The antibody responses in groups of calves challenged intranasally with different doses of M. bovis (approximately 10(2), 10(4), and 10(6) CFU) or placed in contact with the infected animals were analyzed by immunoelectrophoretic blotting in which a whole-cell sonicate of M. bovis was utilized as an antigen. Antibody responses were evident early in infections in which calves were exposed to high doses of M. bovis, while in groups exposed to lower doses, the time until antibody was detected increased as the challenge dose decreased. In cattle exposed to M. bovis, immunoblot analysis showed antibody responses to three main antigens of 26, 22, and 16 kDa. It was further demonstrated that antibody responses to the 26-kDa antigen appeared earliest in the course of infection. Preliminary investigations in this study have identified a 26-kDa antigen for potential use in improved serodiagnosis by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays.
The morphology and morphogenesis of five viruses isolated in Great Britain, France and South Africa from turkeys with rhinotracheitis were examined. The five isolates were antigenically related by immunofluorescence and were indistinguishable by negative contrast and thin section electron microscopy. Negative contrast electron microscopy of infected Vero cell cultures revealed ortho-or paramyxovirus-like particles and helical nucleocapsids 14 nm in diameter with a pitch of 6 nm. The viral nature of these structures was confirmed by immuno-gold labelling, using a hyperimmune rabbit antiserum to TRT virus and 15 nm gold-labelled goat anti-rabbit IgG.Ultrastructural changes characteristics of paramyxovirus infection were observed in Vero cell cultures infected with each of the five TRT virus isolates. These alterations, which included areas of localised thickening of plasma membrane, associated cytoplasmic inclusions of nucleocapsids and budding virus particles also labelled specifically following immunogold staining. These observations are in accord with the suggestion that TRT virus is an avian pneumovirus.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.