IMMUNOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF SHEEP TO INACTIVATED AND VIRULENT BLUETONGUE VIRUS
- 1 January 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 46 (5) , 1043-1049
Abstract
Humoral and cellular immune responses of sheep to inactivated and virulent bluetongue virus (BTV) were studied. All sheep inoculated with inactivated BTV developed BTV group-specific nonneutralizing antibodies, as determined by agar-gel immunodiffusion. The development of group-specific, nonneutralizing, complement-fixing antibodies was variable and appeared to be dependent on immunizing BTV serotype, sheep breed, and individual variation. Virus-neutralizing antibodies were never detected after inoculation with the inactivated BTV. In vitro lymphocyte stimulation to BTV soluble antigen was observed with cells from all inoculated Warhill sheep and with cells from 1 of 3 inoculated Suffolk cross sheep. Complement-fixation titers did not appear to correlate with the degree of protection observed, i.e., duration of postchallenge-exposure viremia. The development of postchallenge-exposure neutralizing antibody titer was inversely correlated to protective immunity. The development of a response to BTV antigen in the lymphocyte stimulation test associated most closely with protection. Warhill sheep were afforded better protection, by inoculation with inactivated BTV, to live virus challenge exposure than were the Suffolk cross sheep. Of the inoculated Suffolk cross sheep, .apprx. 30% responded to challenge exposure with intensified clinical signs of bluetongue, compared with the challenge-exposed control sheep of the same breed.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Overwintering Mechanism for Bluetongue Virus: Biological Recovery of Latent Virus from a Bovine by Bites of Culicoides VariipennisThe American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1977