Hassan J O, Mockett A P, Catty D, Barrow P A
Department of Microbiology, Houghton Laboratory, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom.
Avian Dis. 1991 Oct-Dec;35(4):809-19.
Four-day-old chickens infected orally with a spectinomycin-resistant (Spcr) mutant of a highly invasive avian Salmonella typhimurium strain excreted salmonellae in the feces for at least 10 weeks. When these chickens were reinfected at this time with a nalidixic acid-resistant (Nalr) mutant of the same strain, they excreted this mutant in significantly smaller numbers (P less than 0.01) than did a previously uninfected control group. The Nalr mutant had a shorter survival rate in the tissues of the immunized chickens than in tissues of the control birds. The Spcr mutant stimulated strong IgG, IgA, and IgM responses in serum, small-intestinal contents, and bile. These were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) against antigens of crude whole bacterial cell protein sonicate, lipopolysaccharide, flagella, and outer-membrane proteins. There was some evidence of an anamnestic response with IgA in bile following reinfection with the Salmonella. The peak response of antibody-producing cells from the spleens of infected chickens, assayed by solid-phase ELISA, occurred at 3 weeks postinoculation. A strong delayed hypersensitivity reaction, detected by foot-pad swelling after inoculation with either whole-cell or outer-membrane proteins, was observed between 2 and 5 weeks after infection with the Spcr mutant. The data indicate that outer-membrane proteins are major immunogens for both humoral and cell-mediated arms of the immune system.
用具有高度侵袭性的禽鼠伤寒沙门氏菌菌株的壮观霉素抗性(Spcr)突变体经口感染4日龄雏鸡后,雏鸡粪便中沙门氏菌的排泄持续了至少10周。当这些雏鸡此时再次感染同一菌株的耐萘啶酸(Nalr)突变体时,它们排出的该突变体数量明显少于(P小于0.01)先前未感染的对照组。Nalr突变体在免疫雏鸡组织中的存活率低于对照鸡组织。Spcr突变体在血清、小肠内容物和胆汁中刺激产生强烈的IgG、IgA和IgM反应。通过针对粗制全细菌细胞蛋白超声裂解物、脂多糖、鞭毛和外膜蛋白抗原的酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)检测到这些反应。再次感染沙门氏菌后,胆汁中IgA有一些回忆反应的证据。通过固相ELISA测定,感染雏鸡脾脏中产生抗体细胞的峰值反应在接种后3周出现。在用Spcr突变体感染后2至5周之间,观察到用全细胞或外膜蛋白接种后通过脚垫肿胀检测到的强烈迟发型超敏反应。数据表明,外膜蛋白是免疫系统体液免疫和细胞介导免疫的主要免疫原。