Abstract

One health is an emerging conceptual approach geared to harmonize the activities of the public health, veterinary services, and extension services within a single operative structure. Brucellosis is an important zoonosis worldwide, mostly involving nomadic populations but may often affect transboundary animal management and exotic domesticated animal farming such as camels and buffalo. Here, we provide contemporary knowledge on the disease and its causative agent, a Gram-negative bacteria belonging to the genus Brucella. Further, because of the zoonotic importance, we emphasize the need to assign a national reference laboratory for the disease and discuss how this would integrate into a “One Health” system. Brucella vaccines are live attenuated strains possessing the smooth phenotype, and vaccination, therefore, hampers the ability to maintain a national surveillance program due to concerns regarding the false positive vaccine-induced responses. In order to overcome these failings, we developed a combined approach based on rapid screening of mass numbers of serum samples by the fluorescence polarization assay, a cost-effective and accurate method, and confirmation of the true positive reactors by the complement fixation test, a highly specific method that is less sensitive to vaccine-induced antibodies. We demonstrate how, despite the high vaccination coverage of the small ruminant population in Israel, our results proved to be effective in discriminating between vaccinated and infected animals. The speed and accuracy of the method further justified immediate declaration of 37% of flocks as cleansed from brucellosis, thus reducing the burden of repeated tests among this population.

Highlights

  • Brucellosis is one of the few severe zoonoses with worldwide distribution [1]

  • Rose Bengal Test (RBT) is considered, a screening approach surpassed by the high-throughput enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and fluorescence polarization assay (FPA) methods, because of its low price, some laboratories rather use this test as an alternative test to Complement Fixation Test (CFT)

  • We expected most of the population to be tested negative by FPA as most infected animals have already been excluded from the population

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Summary

Introduction

Brucellosis is one of the few severe zoonoses with worldwide distribution [1]. The disease is associated with domestic animals, which play important roles in the dairy and meat industries [2] and is disseminated to the human population as a family or tribe cluster infection [3]. A control program was instigated in the 1990s based upon Complement Fixation Test (CFT) serological surveys of the adult population and implementation of a combined “test and cull” and live Rev. 1 vaccination program [20].

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