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 ARS microbiologist
Judy Stabel is developing ways to diagnose Johne's Disease in young animals.
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Coordinated Pushback Could Help Contain Bovine
Bacterial Diseases
By
Ann Perry May 14,
2009
Agricultural Research Service
(ARS) scientists at the
National
Animal Disease Center (NADC) in Ames, Iowa, are in a longstanding battle
against two serious bacterial infections of livestock: Johne's disease and
bovine tuberculosis.
Experts believe that almost 70 percent of U.S. cattle herds are
infected with M. avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP), the bacterium that
causes Johne's disease. NADC microbiologist
John
Bannantine and colleagues took information from the MAP genome to assemble
an array of 96 proteins. Then they used the array to identify gene sequences
that might be useful in confirming a Johne's disease diagnosis, or that might
serve as targets for disease intervention and treatment.
Bannantine's team found three proteins that consistently drew the
strongest "attacks" from serum antibodies, an immune response that clearly
linked the three proteins with the onset of the disease. With additional work,
these antigens might provide crucial building blocks for the development of a
diagnostic tool for Johne's disease.
Meanwhile, NADC microbiologist
Judy
Stabel has been studying the early stages of MAP infection and finding ways
to diagnose the disease in young animals. She has also helped evaluate animal
models for MAP research, and has concluded that a smaller ruminant model-such
as goats or sheep-shows promise.
NADC veterinary officers
Ray
Waters and
Mitch
Palmer and molecular biologist
Tyler
Thacker are working on several fronts to optimize bovine tuberculosis
diagnostic tests and vaccinations for both wildlife and domestic livestock. For
instance, Palmer is using white-tailed deer, which are a significant reservoir
of bovine tuberculosis, to test experimental vaccines for potential bovine
tuberculosis control in wildlife.
So far his studies indicate that vaccines can be effective in
decreasing the severity of the disease, and that oral vaccination appears to be
as effective as subcutaneous vaccination. But other safety issues still need to
be resolved before the vaccine could be used in wildlife.
The NADC scientists have also been using neonatal calves to test human
tuberculosis vaccines. This approach is cheaper and safer to use than testing
in nonhuman primates.
Read more
about this research in the May/June 2009 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.