1. Tuberculin Skin Testing Boosts Interferon Gamma Responses to DIVA Reagents in Mycobacterium bovis-Infected Cattle
- Author
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H. Martin Vordermeier, Natalie A. Parlane, Bhagwati Khatri, R. Glyn Hewinson, Gareth Jones, Bryce M. Buddle, Bernardo Villarreal-Ramos, Javier Bezos, and Mick Coad
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Tuberculosis ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Immunology ,Population ,Tuberculin ,Alpha interferon ,complex mixtures ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Blood test ,Animals ,Interferon gamma ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Mycobacterium bovis ,Antigens, Bacterial ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,business.industry ,Tuberculin Test ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,030104 developmental biology ,BCG Vaccine ,Cattle ,business ,BCG vaccine ,Tuberculosis, Bovine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Mycobacterium bovis BCG vaccination sensitizes cattle to bovine tuberculin, which compromises the use of the current bovine tuberculosis (TB) surveillance tests. Although the performance of a blood test (that utilizes antigens expressed by Mycobacterium bovis but not by BCG) capable of discriminating infected from vaccinated animals (DIVA interferon gamma test [DIT]) has been evaluated in naturally infected TB field reactors, there is a need to perform similar analysis in a BCG-vaccinated M. bovis -infected population. Furthermore, we explored different scenarios under which a DIT may be implemented alongside BCG vaccination: (i) serial testing to resolve potential false-positive skin test results or (ii) a standalone test to replace the single intradermal comparative cervical tuberculin (SICCT) skin test. Our results demonstrated significantly better relative test sensitivity when the DIT was evaluated in a serial test scenario. Direct comparison of pre- and post-skin test blood samples revealed that the SICCT test induced significant boosting of the gamma interferon response in M. bovis -infected animals to both the ESAT-6–CFP-10 and Rv3615c peptide cocktails that comprise the DIT, which persisted for the ESAT-6–CFP-10 reagent for at least 14 days. Importantly, no similar boosting effects were observed in noninfected BCG vaccinates, suggesting that DIVA blood testing after a recent skin test would have minimal impact on test specificity.
- Published
- 2017