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Science 17 April 1981:
Vol. 212. no. 4492, pp. 335 - 338
DOI: 10.1126/science.7209532

Articles

Science, Vol 212, Issue 4492, 335-338
Copyright © 1981 by American Association for the Advancement of Science


articles

Bovine babesiosis: protection of cattle with culture-derived soluble Babesia bovis antigen

RD Smith, MA James, M Ristic, M Aikawa, and y CA Vega Murguia

Adult Hereford (Bos taurus) cattle were protected from severe reactions and death caused by the tick-borne protozoan hemoparasite Babesia bovis, 3 months after vaccination with a cell culture--derived immunogen. The immunogen consisted of filtered, freeze-dried supernatant fluid collected from long-term cultures of Babesia bovis in vitro. It was reconstituted with saponin adjuvant and injected twice subcutaneously at 2-week intervals. Serum collected from vaccinated cattle caused thickening of the merozoite surface coat, aggregation, and lysis of merozoites in vitro. This reaction was identical to that caused by serum from immune carrier cattle suggesting that the protective antigen present in culture fluids is merozoite surface coat antigen. No mortality occurred among vaccinated cattle, whereas mortality among unvaccinated cattle and Babesia bigemina--immune cattle was 62.5 percent indicating that immunity to bovine babesiosis is species-specific.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Babesiosis.
M. J. Homer, I. Aguilar-Delfin, S. R. Telford III, P. J. Krause, and D. H. Persing (2000)
Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 13, 451-469
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