Author:
DE BONT J.,VERCRUYSSE J.,GRZYCH J. M.,MEEUS P. F. M.,CAPRON A.
Abstract
The potential of a recombinant Schistosoma bovis-derived
glutathione S-transferase (rSb28GST) to protect cattle against
S. mattheei infection was tested in Zambia. All animals were
challenged 2 weeks after the second inoculation with either
0·250 mg rSb28GST in adjuvants (vaccinated calves, n=14)
or adjuvants alone (controls, n=14). In a first experiment,
7 vaccinated and 7 control animals were exposed to 10000 S. mattheei
cercariae percutaneously. All animals developed
clinical schistosomiasis 7–8 weeks after challenge.
At perfusion, 12 weeks after challenge, vaccinated and control groups
had averages of 887 and 541 eggs per gramme (epg) faeces, 6515 and 5990
worms,
and 4·2 and 3·4 million tissue eggs,
respectively. These results indicate that the immunization protocol used
did not protect these calves against the massive
single experimental challenge. In a second experiment, another 2 groups
(n=7) of vaccinated and control animals were
challenged naturally over a period of 9 months on a farm known to be
endemic for S. mattheei. The natural infections were
much lighter in intensity, as indicated by the mean faecal egg count
(13 epg), worm count (139) and tissue egg count
(294000) in non-vaccinated controls. In vaccinated calves, significant
reductions in female worm burdens (50%), faecal
egg counts (89%) and miracidial counts (93%) were recorded. Total tissue
egg counts were also reduced by 42% in
vaccinated animals. It therefore appears that the rSb28GST can provide
significant protection in cattle against S. mattheei
under conditions of low to moderate natural infection.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
21 articles.
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