1. Immunogenicity and efficacy study of a commercial Borrelia burgdorferi bacterin.
- Author
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Chu HJ, Chavez LG Jr, Blumer BM, Sebring RW, Wasmoen TL, and Acree WM
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Dogs, Female, Immunoblotting, Lameness, Animal etiology, Lyme Disease prevention & control, Male, Vaccination veterinary, Antibodies, Bacterial biosynthesis, Bacterial Vaccines immunology, Borrelia burgdorferi Group immunology, Dog Diseases prevention & control, Lyme Disease veterinary
- Abstract
The immunogenicity and efficacy of a commercial Borrelia burgdorferi bacterin was evaluated for stimulation of the host immune response and protection against clinical disease associated with experimentally induced borreliosis in dogs. A total of 30 vaccinated and 24 control dogs were used in 3 separate studies. The vaccine was given IM as two 1-ml doses separated by a 3-week interval. Two weeks or 5 months following the last vaccination, the dogs were challenge inoculated with 7 daily doses of a virulent preparation of a B burgdorferi field isolate through intraperitoneal, subcutaneous, and intradermal routes with or without glucocorticoid administration at the same time. The development of B burgdorferi spirochetemia and clinical disease in the dogs after challenge exposure was studied. Serum samples were obtained from the dogs at various times during the study for serum neutralizing antibody determination and protein immunoblot antibody assay against various geographic isolates of B burgdorferi. Challenge exposure induced limb/joint disorder, fever, anorexia, signs of depression, and B burgdorferi spirochetemia in the nonvaccinated control dogs. The vaccine was found to elicit cross-reactive serum neutralizing and protein immunoblot antibody responses in dogs to various isolates of B burgdorferi and to protect the vaccinated dogs against experimentally induced borreliosis.
- Published
- 1992