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Neospora caninum in persistently infected, pregnant cows: spontaneous transplacental infection is associated with an acute increase in maternal antibody

Guy, C. S., Williams, Diana J.L., Kelly, D. F., McGarry, J.W., Guy, F., Bjorkman, C., Smith, R. F. and Trees, Alexander J. (2001) 'Neospora caninum in persistently infected, pregnant cows: spontaneous transplacental infection is associated with an acute increase in maternal antibody'. Veterinary Record, Vol 149, Issue 15, pp. 443-449.

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Abstract

Nine cows which were naturally and persistently infected with Neospora caninum were housed and observed intensively throughout pregnancy. No recrudescence of a latent infection was detected by PCR tests on maternal blood but fetal infection, implying a recrudescence of maternal parasitosis, was associated with a marked increase in maternal antibody. The increase occurred in the second half of pregnancy in five cows which infected their calves, and before mid-pregnancy in one cow which aborted. There was no change in the avidity of the antibody, which remained high and characteristic of long-term infection. in three infected cows that gave birth to uninfected calves there was no marked increase in maternal antibody. Antigen-specific interferon gamma responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells were observed in all the infected cattle but they did not vary significantly either during pregnancy, or whether the cows did or did not infect their calves, although the responses were consistently higher in the latter. There was no change in the plasma concentrations of cortisol or acute phase proteins associated with the recrudescence of the parasite. Three uninfected cows housed with the infected cows remained uninfected throughout the experiment. No immunosuppressive event was detected which might have provoked parasite recrudescence but the acute antibody rise associated with transplacental infection provides a valuable, non-invasive marker for further studies to investigate the cause and consequences of parasite recrudescence in N caninum infection in cattle.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: W General Medicine. Health Professions > W 20.55.V4 Veterinary biomedical research
Faculty: Department: Pre 2002
Digital Object Identifer (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1136/vr.149.15.443
Depositing User: Martin Chapman
Date Deposited: 17 Apr 2014 09:43
Last Modified: 06 Feb 2018 13:05
URI: https://archive.lstmed.ac.uk/id/eprint/3150

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