1.Study on Passive Immunity: time of Vaccination in Kids Born to Goats Vaccinated Against Peste des petits ruminants
Balamurugan Vinayagamuthy ; Sen Arnab ; Venkatesan Gnanavel ; Rajak Kishor Kaushal ; Bhanuprakash Veerakyathappa ; Singh Kumar Raj
Virologica Sinica 2012;27(4):228-233
In this study,the decay of maternal peste des petits ruminants virus(PPRV) antibodies in kids born to goats vaccinated with Asian lineage IV PPR vaccine and the efficacy of passive immunity against PPRV was assessed to determine the appropriate period for vaccination in kids.Serum samples collected from kids born to vaccinated,unvaccinated and infected goats at different time intervals were tested by PPR competitive ELISA and serum neutralization test(SNT).Maternal antibodies in kids were detectable up to 6 months with a decline trend from the third month onwards and receded below the protective level by the fourth month.The kid with an SN titre of 1∶8 at the time of immunization showed significant PPRV specific antibody response(percentage inhibition of 76; SN titers >1∶16),when tested on 21 day post-vaccination and was completely protected from infection upon virulent PPRV challenge.Similarly,the kid with 1∶8 SN titers was completely protected from PPR infection on active challenge.Therefore,PPR vaccination is recommended in kids,aged 4 months and born to immunized or exposed goats.This could be a suitable period to avoid window of susceptibility in kids to PPRV and the effort to eliminate PPR infection from susceptible populations.
2.Cytokines Expression Profile and Kinetics of Peste des petits ruminants Virus Antigen and Antibody in Infected and Vaccinated Goats
Patel Arun ; Rajak Kishor Kaushal ; Balamurugan Vinayagamurthy ; Sen Arnab ; Sudhakar Bhusan Shashi ; Bhanuprakash Veerakyathappa ; Singh Kumar Raj ; Pandey Bihari Awadh
Virologica Sinica 2012;27(4):265-271
The present study deals with the co-ordination of cytokine(IL-4 and IFN-γ) expression and kinetics of peste des petits ruminants(PPR) virus antigen and antibody in PPRV infected and vaccinated goats.The infected animals exhibited mixed cytokine(both TH1 and TH2) responses in the initial phase of the disease.The infected and dead goats had increased IFN-γ response before their death; while IL-4 remained at the base level.The cytokine expression in recovered animals was almost similar to that of vaccinated ones,where a unique biphasic response of IL-4 expression was observed with an up-regulation of IFN-γ on 7th days post vaccination(dpv).Analysis of PPR virus antigen and antibody kinetics in different components of blood from infected and vaccinated animals revealed that the PPR virus antigen load was highest in plasma followed by serum and blood of the infected animals,whereas vaccinated animals showed only marginal positivity on 9th dpv.The antibody titer was high in serum followed by plasma and blood in both vaccinated and infected animals.Therefore,it is inferred that the presence of antigen and antibody were significant with the expression of cytokine,and that a decreased response of IL-4 was noticed during intermediate phase of the disease i.e.,7 to 12th days post infection(dpi).This indicates the ability to mount a functional TH2 response after 14th dpi could be a critical determinant in deciding the survival of the PPR infected animal.
3.Prevalence of peste des petits ruminants among sheep and goats in India.
Vinayagamurthy BALAMURUGAN ; Paramasivam SARAVANAN ; Arnab SEN ; Kaushal Kishor RAJAK ; Gnanavel VENKATESAN ; Paramanandham KRISHNAMOORTHY ; Veerakyathappa BHANUPRAKASH ; Raj Kumar SINGH
Journal of Veterinary Science 2012;13(3):279-285
This study measured the clinical prevalence of peste des petits ruminants (PPR) among sheep and goats in India between 2003 and 2009 by analyzing clinical samples from suspected cases of PPR that were submitted to the Rinderpest and Allied Disease Laboratory, Division of Virology, IVRI, Mukteswar for PPR diagnosis. PPR outbreaks were confirmed by detecting PPR virus (PPRV)-specific antigen in the clinical samples. Clinical samples (blood, nasal swabs, spleen, lymph node, kidney, liver, intestine, and pooled tissue materials) were taken from a total of 592 sheep and 912 goats in different states of India and screened for the presence of PPRV antigen using a monoclonal antibody-based sandwich ELISA kit. A total of 20, 38, and 11 laboratory-confirmed PPR outbreaks occurred among sheep, goat, and combined sheep and goat populations, respectively. Our findings provide evidence of widespread PPR endemicity in India. The underlying reasons could be variations in husbandry practices in different geographical regions, agro-climatic conditions, and livestock migration. Furthermore, decrease in the number of PPR outbreaks over time might be due to the effectiveness of current live PPR vaccines and timely vaccination of target species. Vaccination against PPR has been practiced in India since 2002 to control this disease.
Animals
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Antibodies, Monoclonal/immunology
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Antigens, Viral/*blood
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Disease Outbreaks/*veterinary
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Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay/veterinary
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Goat Diseases/*epidemiology/immunology/prevention & control
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Goats
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India/epidemiology
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Nucleocapsid Proteins/immunology
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Peste-des-Petits-Ruminants/epidemiology/immunology/prevention & control/*veterinary
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Peste-des-petits-ruminants virus/*immunology/isolation & purification
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Prevalence
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Risk Factors
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Seasons
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Sheep
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Sheep Diseases/*epidemiology/immunology/prevention & control
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Vaccination/veterinary
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Viral Vaccines/*immunology/therapeutic use