Causative ehrlichial organisms in Potomac horse fever
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 49 (3) , 513-517
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.49.3.513-517.1985
Abstract
An ehrlichia was consistently isolated from the peripheral blood leukocyte fraction of ponies that had been experimentally infected with Potomac horse fever by whole blood transfusion from naturally infected horses. The organism was propagated in a human histiocyte cell line for 3-5 wk and then inoculated i.v. or interadermally into healthy adult ponies. Clinical signs of Potomac horse fever, which varied in the degree of severity, occurred 9-14 days post-inoculation in all of the ponies. One pony died 20 days post-inoculation. The ehrlichial oranism was reisolated in the human histiocyte cell line from the blood leukocyte fraction of all of the experimental ponies on each day that samples were examined (days 9, 10, 11, 19, and 39). These organisms were identical to those originally detected in the wall of the intestine of ponies with clinically diagnosed Potomac horse fever when compared by light and electron microscopy and an immunofluorescence labeling technique. The immunofluorescent antibody titer became positive in a pony at 20 days postinjection. These results indicate that the ehrlichial organism is the causative agent of Potomac horse fever.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ultrastructural study of ehrlichial organisms in the large colons of ponies infected with Potomac horse feverInfection and Immunity, 1985
- Isolation, Experimental Transmission, and Characterization of Causative Agent of Potomac Horse FeverScience, 1985
- Establishment and characterization of a human histiocytic lymphoma cell line (U‐937)International Journal of Cancer, 1976