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Evaluation of the efficacy of a swine antileptospiral bacterin: relationship between the results of in vitro leptospiral growth inhibition test applied to swine sera with the ones in vivo potency test in hamsters

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Author(s):
Amane Paldês Gonçales
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Faculdade de Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia (FMVZ/SBD)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Silvio Arruda Vasconcellos; Patricia Antonia Estima Abreu de Aniz; Margareth Elide Genovez; Andrea Micke Moreno; Francisco Rafael Martins Soto
Advisor: Silvio Arruda Vasconcellos
Abstract

The potency of antileptospirosis bacterins is controlled by in vivo experimental assay performed in hamsters; however, nowadays the search for in vitro methodologies that could replace the use of laboratory animals has been stimulated. For this purpose, the In vitro leptospiral growth inhibition test (IVLGIT) has been proposed as an alternative test. In this work, the intensity and duration of the passive immunity in suckling piglets and active immunity in weaned piglets and adult sows were evaluated, after vaccination with an experimental leptospirosis bacterin, which had been approved previously on the potency test in hamsters. The in vitro tests applied to swine sera were the growth inhibition test (IVLGIT), microscopic agglutination (MAT) and anti-IgG ELISA. The bacterin was produced with a pathogenic Leptospira interrogans serovar Kennewicki strain identified as Pomona Fromm (LPF), and added with aluminum hydroxide as adjuvant at a concentration of 10% of the final volume dose. In order to evaluate the efficacy of the minimum concentration of the leptospires to be used in the bacterin, ten-fold serial dilutions of a culture of leptospira varying from 105 to 109 leptospires/mL were submitted to potency-challenge test in hamsters (Trial A). Only the bacterin produced at the concentration of 109 leptospires/mL protected the hamsters against the infection by LPF strain, when the vaccine was tested at the dilution of 1:800, which is the international criterion for the approval. The bacterin at the concentration of 109 leptospires/mL was submitted to the potency test in hamsters (Trial B), which had been immunized with an undiluted and with two-fold serially diluted bacterin (from 1:200 to 1:25,600). In the challenge test in hamsters, the bacterin has passed till the dilution of 1:6,400. The control of the challenge inoculum presented a titer of 100 LD50. Adult sows, never been vaccinated against leptospirosis, and that showed negative MAT results using 24 reference serovars and with negative IVLGIT with the LPF strain (Trial 1) had administered two doses of bacterin with 30 day interval and a booster dose at 210th day after the first application of the undiluted bacterin and the two-fold diluted ones (1:400 to :3,200). The animals were 18 monitored with bleeding performed each 30 days. The levels of antibodies evaluated by MAT and IVLGIT showed the maximum peak at the 30th day after the second vaccination of the bacterin, with high magnitude found with the undiluted bacterin, however, at the 120th day after the second vaccination there were found a marked decline in antibodies levels. To find a better immunization scheme (Trial 2), the sows received two doses of undiluted bacterin with 30 day interval and the booster dose at the 150th day after the first dose. The reduction on the interval of revaccination after the two initial doses determined the persistence of a higher levels agglutinins and neutralizing antibodies with titers 0.4 log. In suckling piglets born from sows immunized with the bacterin at the concentration of 109 leptospires/mL, the passive transference of antibodies was confirmed by MAT titers detected on the fifth day, and by IVLGIT titers, at the fifth and tenth days after birth. In the study of weaned piglets immunized with the bacterin at the concentrations of 106, 107, 108 and 109 leptospires/mL (Trial 3), the highest antibodies levels were observed at the 30th day after the second immunization, with greater magnitude for the bacterin tested at the concentration of 109 leptospires/mL. The final results indicate that sows and weaned piglets, primo-vaccinated and revaccinated with 30 day interval with bacterin that had passed in the potency-challenge test in hamsters, presented the IVLGIT results varying (95% CI) from 0.87 log to 1.35 log for sows and 1.22 to 1.58 log for weaned piglets, at the 60th day after the first vaccination. In adult sows the highest anti-IgG ELISA titer reached 12,800, obtained after the booster vaccine dose performed at 210th day from the first vaccination. (AU)