The inefficacy of polivalent Pasteurella multocida vaccines for sheep
Loading...
Date
Authors
Cameron, Colin McKenzie
Bester, Faith J.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Published by The Government Printer, Pretoria
Abstract
Immunity assays on sheep sera using passive mouse protection tests showed that vaccines containing more than 4 strains of Pasteurella multocida did not give a good immunity. The immune response was not enhanced by the use of an oil adjuvant, and high concentrations of bacteria had only a partial positive effect.
Attempts to extract selectively the protection-inducing antigen(s) from P. multocida by veronal, phenol or potassium thiocyanate extraction were unsuccessful. Furthermore, it was found that sheep antisera to the recognized type strains of P. multocida afforded only limited protection against a number of field strains. We concluded from this that successful immunization against ovine pasteurellosis will depend on either the identification of a strain of P. multocida that gives a wide spectrum of immunity or the discovery of a live mutant suitable for vaccine production and the definition of cultural conditions that promote the expression of a common immunizing antigen.
Description
The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi.
Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.
Keywords
Veterinary medicine
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Cameron, CM & Bester, FJ 1983, 'The inefficacy of polivalent Pasteurella multocida vaccines for sheep’, Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research, vol. 50, no. 2, pp. 101-104.