Comparative evaluation of non-structural protein-antibody detecting ELISAs for foot-and-mouth disease sero-surveillance under intensive vaccination
Autor: | Bramhadev Pattnaik, Sonalika Mahajan, Jajati K. Mohapatra, Saravanan Subramaniam, Gaurav Sharma, Rakesh Matura |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Population
Cattle Diseases India Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay Disease Viral Nonstructural Proteins Antibodies Viral Sensitivity and Specificity Virus Virology medicine Animals Serologic Tests education Antigens Viral education.field_of_study biology Foot-and-mouth disease medicine.disease Diva Vaccination Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus Foot-and-Mouth Disease Epidemiological Monitoring Inactivated vaccine biology.protein Cattle Antibody |
Zdroj: | Journal of Virological Methods. 207:22-28 |
ISSN: | 0166-0934 |
Popis: | Foot-and-mouth disease is a highly infectious and contagious disease of livestock animals with transboundary and economical importance. Animals in the endemic settings are regularly vaccinated in addition to intensive surveillance for control of the disease. Under intensive vaccination, detection of infected animals among the vaccinated population is essential to monitor the infection and to track down the virus movement. Sero-surveillance and retrospective disease diagnosis is performed primarily by detecting antibodies against non-structural proteins (NSPs) of FMD virus which are usually absent in the inactivated vaccine formulations. The study was conducted with an objective to compare simultaneously performance of six NSP ELISAs in detecting infected animals in the areas covered under intensive vaccination, and to assess their fit-for-purpose attribute for sero-surveillance of FMD in India. A panel of bovine serum samples consisting of samples collected from infected with FMDV, vaccinated and naive animals were constituted. In addition, samples collected at random from areas having varied FMD situation and vaccination coverage were tested simultaneously by the six NSP ELISAs to compare their performances. The four indigenous assays showed varying degrees of correlation with the two commercial kits. The study validated that, in all the groups of samples, the indigenous assays were equally sensitive and specific as the two commercial kits. Among all the six assays, PrioCheck and in-house 3ABC I-ELISAs showed maximum sensitivity for detection of infected animals, whereas 3AB3 I-ELISA and 3ABC C-ELISA showed maximum specificity. The study concluded that the in-house available assays are equally capable as the commercially available kits for differentiation of infected animals under intensive vaccination and identifies the 3AB3 I-ELISA with optimum sensitivity and specificity for the purpose of sero-surveillance in India. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |