Publication | Closed Access
Protection of sheep against experimental footrot by vaccination with pili purified from<i>Bacteroides</i>nodosus
61
Citations
16
References
1982
Year
VaccinationVeterinary VaccineVaccine DevelopmentMedicineArtificial Footrot InfectionImmunologyVeterinary ScienceMerino SheepDisease ControlVeterinary MicrobiologyMicrobiologyInfection ControlAnimal Disease PreventionBacterial PathogensExperimental FootrotB. Nodosus PilusParasitology
Merino sheep vaccinated with either whole Bacteroides nodosus organisms, a crude surface antigen preparation or highly purified pili (>99% homogeneity) in oil adjuvant, developed significant resistance to artificial footrot infection when compared with unvaccinated control sheep inoculated with saline-in-oil emulsion (Freund;s incomplete adjuvant) alone. The pili-vaccinated sheep generally had higher K-agglutinating antibody titres than sheep vaccinated with whole B. nodosus. These results confirmed the role of B. nodosus pilus protein both as a protective antigen and the K-agglutinogen. Vaccines prepared with Freund;s incomplete adjuvant containing either purified pili, crude pili or B. nodosus whole cells did not produce significantly different injection-site reactions.
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