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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, Sep 1997, 2293-2298, Vol 35, No. 9
B Kaltenboeck, D Heard, FJ DeGraves and N Schmeer
Synthetic peptide antigens were prepared for use in enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) to detect serum antibodies against
abortigenic strains of Chlamydia psittaci in livestock. Peptide antigens
were identified with C. psittaci B577-immune sera by solid- phase scanning
of overlapping octapeptides of variable domains (VDs) of the major outer
membrane protein of C. psittaci serovar 1 (omp1 type C. psittaci B577). Two
VD 4 regions and one VD 2 region were strongly reactive with all C.
psittaci B577 antisera. Peptides encompassing these regions were
synthesized with biotin and a serine-glycine-serine- glycine spacer at the
N terminus and were attached to streptavidin- coated microtiter plates. In
direct ELISAs with these plates, the synthetic peptides reacted with C.
psittaci B577 antisera, but not with sera from specific-pathogen-free
animals. Serum specimens from 40 sheep and 40 cattle, obtained from herds
with abortion problems, were screened for antibodies by these C. psittaci
B577 peptide ELISAs and an ELISA with recombinant, genus-specific Chlamydia
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) antigen. Results from these newly developed ELISAs
were compared to those from the reference C. psittaci B577 elementary body
(EB) ELISA and the Chlamydia complement fixation test (CFT). The C.
psittaci B577 peptide ELISAs, the LPS ELISA, and the EB ELISA correctly
identified the presence or absence of antibodies against chlamydiae in all
sheep and bovine sera. The Chlamydia CFT, which is the most widely accepted
serodiagnostic method for chlamydial infections in animals, correctly
identified the presence or absence of antibodies against chlamydiae in only
78 and 4.9% of sheep and bovine sera, respectively. These results suggest
that the C. psittaci B577-peptide and Chlamydia LPS ELISAs are superior for
the serodiagnosis of ruminant infections with abortigenic chlamydiae, since
they are more sensitive than the CFT, they are easy to standardize, and
they use readily available synthetic antigens instead of organism-derived
CFT antigen.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Use of synthetic antigens improves detection by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay of antibodies against abortigenic Chlamydia psittaci in ruminants
Department of Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, Alabama 36849-5519, USA. kaltebe@vetmed.auburn.edu
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