Perrone Danielle, Bender Scott, Niewiesk Stefan
Department of Veterinary Biosciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Ohio State University, USA.
Can J Vet Res. 2010 Jul;74(3):214-7.
Canine distemper virus (CDV)-specific immune response was measured in different dog populations. Three groups of vaccinated or wild-type virus exposed dogs were tested: dogs with a known vaccination history, dogs without a known vaccination history (shelter dogs), and dogs with potential exposure to wild-type CDV. The use of a T-cell proliferation assay demonstrated a detectable CDV-specific T-cell response from both spleen and blood lymphocytes of dogs. Qualitatively, antibody assays [enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and neutralization assay] predicted the presence of a T-cell response well, although quantitatively neither antibody assays nor the T-cell assay correlated well with each other. An interesting finding from our study was that half of the dogs in shelters were not vaccinated (potentially posing a public veterinary health problem) and that antibody levels in dogs living in an environment with endemic CDV were lower than in vaccinated animals.
在不同犬类群体中检测了犬瘟热病毒(CDV)特异性免疫反应。对三组接种过疫苗或接触过野生型病毒的犬进行了检测:有已知疫苗接种史的犬、无已知疫苗接种史的犬(收容所犬)以及可能接触过野生型CDV的犬。使用T细胞增殖试验证明,犬的脾脏和血液淋巴细胞均存在可检测到的CDV特异性T细胞反应。定性方面,抗体检测[酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)和中和试验]能较好地预测T细胞反应的存在,尽管在定量方面,抗体检测和T细胞检测彼此之间的相关性都不太好。我们研究中的一个有趣发现是,收容所中一半的犬未接种疫苗(这可能构成公共兽医健康问题),且生活在CDV地方性流行环境中的犬的抗体水平低于接种过疫苗的动物。