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Infection and Immunity, February 2000, p. 603-614, Vol. 68, No. 2
Department of
Immunology1 and Department of Molecular
Biology,2 Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute,
Onderstepoort, Republic of South Africa; Department of
Parasitology, Kimron Veterinary Institute, Beit-Dagan,
Israel3; and Department of Veterinary
Microbiology and Pathology, Washington State University, Pullman,
Washington 991644
Received 7 July 1999/Returned for modification 31 August
1999/Accepted 28 October 1999
Cowdria ruminantium is an obligate intracellular
pathogen that causes heartwater in ruminants. Several findings suggest
that T cells play an important role in protection against the disease. In order to identify which proteins are involved in T-cell immunity, C. ruminantium proteins were fractionated by
continuous-flow electrophoresis and tested for their ability to
stimulate lymphocyte proliferation in vitro. C. ruminantium-infected endothelial cell lysates were fractionated
at between 11 and 38 kDa and 50 and 168 kDa on 15 and 7% acrylamide
gels, respectively. In an attempt to stimulate the natural infective
process, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were obtained from
two cattle rendered immune by infection and treatment and assayed in
proliferation assays with fractionated proteins. In a parallel study,
four cattle were immunized with inactivated C. ruminantium
to determine whether their lymphocytes also responded to fractionated
proteins. Proliferation assays after immunization by infection and
treatment detected no C. ruminantium-specific proliferation
in vitro after one vaccination. Proliferation was observed, however,
between 1 and 4 weeks after challenge. This was followed by a period of
no detectable response, after which the response reappeared. PBMC from
animals immunized with inactivated organisms proliferated specifically
in response to antigen soon after the first immunization. Only C. ruminantium proteins with low molecular masses of 11, 12, 14 to
17, and 19 to 23 kDa induced proliferative responses by lymphocytes
from all six animals. These protein fractions may have potential as
vaccine antigens.
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Identification of Cowdria ruminantium
Antigens That Stimulate Proliferation of Lymphocytes from Cattle
Immunized by Infection and Treatment or with Inactivated
Organisms
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Onderstepoort
Veterinary Institute, Department of Immunology, Private Bag X5,
Onderstepoort, 0110, Republic of South Africa. Phone: 27-12-529-9257. Fax: 27-12-529-9434. E-mail: mirinda{at}moon.ovi.ac.za.
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