Antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccines

Despite the absence of current official reports showing the number of cattle infected by rabies, it is estimated that nearly 30,000 bovines are lost each year in Brazil. In order to minimize the important economic losses, control of the disease is achieved by eliminating bat colonies and by herd vaccination. In this study, we compare the antibody response in cattle elicited by vaccination with an attenuated ERA vaccine (AEvac) and an inactivated-adjuvanted PV (IPVvac) vaccine. The antibody titers were appraised by cell-culture neutralization test and ELISA, and the percentage of seropositivity was ascertained for a period of 180 days. IPVvac elicited complete seropositivity rates from day 30 to day 150, and even on day 180, 87% of the sera showed virus-neutralizing antibody titers (VNA) higher than 0.5IU/ml. There were no significant differences between the VNA titers and seropositivity rates obtained with IPVvac in the two methods tested. AEvac, however, elicited significantly lower titers than those observed in the group receiving inactivated vaccine. In addition, the profiles of antirabies IgG antibodies, evaluated by ELISA, and VNA, appraised by cell-culture neutralization test, were slightly different, when both vaccines were compared.

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Main Authors: RODRIGUES da SILVA,Andréa de Cássia, CAPORALE,Graciane Maria Medeiros, GONÇALVES,Celso Alberto, TARGUETA,Mosar Couteiro, COMIN,Fabiano, ZANETTI,Carlos Roberto, KOTAIT,Ivanete
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo 2000
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652000000200006
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spelling oai:scielo:S0036-466520000002000062000-05-12Antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccinesRODRIGUES da SILVA,Andréa de CássiaCAPORALE,Graciane Maria MedeirosGONÇALVES,Celso AlbertoTARGUETA,Mosar CouteiroCOMIN,FabianoZANETTI,Carlos RobertoKOTAIT,Ivanete Rabies Cattle vaccination Neutralizing antibodies Antirabies IgG Despite the absence of current official reports showing the number of cattle infected by rabies, it is estimated that nearly 30,000 bovines are lost each year in Brazil. In order to minimize the important economic losses, control of the disease is achieved by eliminating bat colonies and by herd vaccination. In this study, we compare the antibody response in cattle elicited by vaccination with an attenuated ERA vaccine (AEvac) and an inactivated-adjuvanted PV (IPVvac) vaccine. The antibody titers were appraised by cell-culture neutralization test and ELISA, and the percentage of seropositivity was ascertained for a period of 180 days. IPVvac elicited complete seropositivity rates from day 30 to day 150, and even on day 180, 87% of the sera showed virus-neutralizing antibody titers (VNA) higher than 0.5IU/ml. There were no significant differences between the VNA titers and seropositivity rates obtained with IPVvac in the two methods tested. AEvac, however, elicited significantly lower titers than those observed in the group receiving inactivated vaccine. In addition, the profiles of antirabies IgG antibodies, evaluated by ELISA, and VNA, appraised by cell-culture neutralization test, were slightly different, when both vaccines were compared.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto de Medicina Tropical de São PauloRevista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo v.42 n.2 20002000-04-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652000000200006en10.1590/S0036-46652000000200006
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
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author RODRIGUES da SILVA,Andréa de Cássia
CAPORALE,Graciane Maria Medeiros
GONÇALVES,Celso Alberto
TARGUETA,Mosar Couteiro
COMIN,Fabiano
ZANETTI,Carlos Roberto
KOTAIT,Ivanete
spellingShingle RODRIGUES da SILVA,Andréa de Cássia
CAPORALE,Graciane Maria Medeiros
GONÇALVES,Celso Alberto
TARGUETA,Mosar Couteiro
COMIN,Fabiano
ZANETTI,Carlos Roberto
KOTAIT,Ivanete
Antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccines
author_facet RODRIGUES da SILVA,Andréa de Cássia
CAPORALE,Graciane Maria Medeiros
GONÇALVES,Celso Alberto
TARGUETA,Mosar Couteiro
COMIN,Fabiano
ZANETTI,Carlos Roberto
KOTAIT,Ivanete
author_sort RODRIGUES da SILVA,Andréa de Cássia
title Antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccines
title_short Antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccines
title_full Antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccines
title_fullStr Antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccines
title_full_unstemmed Antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccines
title_sort antibody response in cattle after vaccination with inactivated and attenuated rabies vaccines
description Despite the absence of current official reports showing the number of cattle infected by rabies, it is estimated that nearly 30,000 bovines are lost each year in Brazil. In order to minimize the important economic losses, control of the disease is achieved by eliminating bat colonies and by herd vaccination. In this study, we compare the antibody response in cattle elicited by vaccination with an attenuated ERA vaccine (AEvac) and an inactivated-adjuvanted PV (IPVvac) vaccine. The antibody titers were appraised by cell-culture neutralization test and ELISA, and the percentage of seropositivity was ascertained for a period of 180 days. IPVvac elicited complete seropositivity rates from day 30 to day 150, and even on day 180, 87% of the sera showed virus-neutralizing antibody titers (VNA) higher than 0.5IU/ml. There were no significant differences between the VNA titers and seropositivity rates obtained with IPVvac in the two methods tested. AEvac, however, elicited significantly lower titers than those observed in the group receiving inactivated vaccine. In addition, the profiles of antirabies IgG antibodies, evaluated by ELISA, and VNA, appraised by cell-culture neutralization test, were slightly different, when both vaccines were compared.
publisher Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo
publishDate 2000
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652000000200006
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