Abstract

Tropical or Mediterranean theileriosis, caused by the protozoan parasite Theileria annulata, remains an economically important bovine disease in North Africa, Southern Europe, India, the Middle East and Asia. The disease affects mainly exotic cattle and imposes serious constraints upon livestock production and breed improvement programmes. While microscopic and molecular methods exist which are capable of detecting T. annulata during acute infection, the identification of animals in the carrier state is more challenging. Serological tests, which detect antibodies that react against parasite-encoded antigens, should ideally have the potential to identify carrier animals with very high levels of sensitivity and specificity. However, assays developed to date have suffered from a lack of sensitivity and/or specificity and it is, therefore, necessary to identify novel parasite antigens, which can be developed for this purpose. In the present study, genes encoding predicted antigens were bioinformatically identified in the T. annulata genome. These proteins, together with a panel of previously described antigens, were assessed by western blot analysis for immunoreactivity, and this revealed that four novel candidates and five previously described antigens were recognised by immune bovine serum. Using a combination of immunoprecipitation and mass spectrophotometric analysis, an immunodominant protein (encoded by TA15705) was identified as Ta9, a previously defined T cell antigen. Western blotting revealed another of the five proteins in the Ta9 family, TA15710, also to be an immunodominant protein. However, validation by Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay indicated that due to either allelic polymorphism or differential immune responses of individual hosts, none of the novel candidates can be considered ideal for routine detection of T. annulata-infected/carrier animals.

Highlights

  • Tropical or Mediterranean theileriosis is an economically important bovine disease which is widespread between longitude 30°W—150°E and latitude 15°- 60°N [1]

  • The carrier state is characterised by the presence of low numbers of piroplasm-infected erythrocytes [5] that are infective for feeding tick larvae and/or nymphs and the carrier state is important for the transmission of the parasite

  • We investigated whether additional immunodominant antigens do exist and tested identified candidates as suitable targets for an enzymelinked immunosorbent assays (ELISA)

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Summary

Introduction

Tropical or Mediterranean theileriosis is an economically important bovine disease which is widespread between longitude 30°W—150°E and latitude 15°- 60°N [1]. The disease is caused by the protozoan parasite Theileria annulata and is transmitted by several species of ixodid ticks of the genus Hyalomma [2]. The disease imposes serious constraints upon livestock production in developing countries. In cattle that survive acute disease, a long-lasting carrier state develops, a condition that is associated with significant production and economic losses [3,4]. The carrier state is characterised by the presence of low numbers of piroplasm-infected erythrocytes [5] that are infective for feeding tick larvae and/or nymphs and the carrier state is important for the transmission of the parasite. Identification of carrier animals is crucial for an accurate assessment of disease epidemiology in endemic areas in order that effective control strategies may be designed and, a high throughput sensitive diagnostic assay is required

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