Carrier state studies in Theileria parva infected cattle in Zimbabwe
dc.contributor.advisor
Williamson, S. M.
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Mahan, S.
en
dc.contributor.author
Masaka, Samuel Musekiwa
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-06-04T09:49:17Z
dc.date.available
2019-06-04T09:49:17Z
dc.date.issued
1997
dc.description.abstract
Theileriosis caused by the protozoan parasite Theileria parva, transmitted by
Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks, is an important animal disease for the livestock
industry in Zimbabwe. To characterise Zimbabwean T parva parasites, susceptible
calves were infected by 3 methods; (a) subcutaneous inoculation with three T. parva
ground-up-tick stabilates, (b) application of ticks collected from the field and (c) field
exposure. The aim of the study was to characterise the duration of parasitaemia
following infection by the 3 methods, and to compare the sensitivity of the
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) assay with conventional methods for detection of
carrier status.
en
dc.description.abstract
All the animals seroconverted following infection or tick exposure, as detected in the
Indirect fluorescent antibody test (IF AT) for antibodies to T parva, were
demonstrated to be carriers of infection by PCR for the duration of experiment, and
immune to T parva A very challenge after 522 days under tick free conditions. In
order to demonstrate a carrier status clean R. appendiculatus nymphs were fed on the
recovered animals on 4 dates up to 456 days post infection and allowed to moult to
adults and examined for infection.. Ten out of 14 animals had a carrier status that
resulted in tick infections.
en
dc.description.abstract
Cultures of Theileria infected lymphoblastoid cells were attempted from animals
which developed theileriosis at Hunyani estates on field exposure. The monoclonal
antibody (MAb) profile indicated infections in each case with Theileria taurotragi
isolates. However, the clinical and post-mortem examination findings of the calves
were typical of T. parva infection. Animals which recovered after treatment had
persistent piroplasm parasitaemia and high infection prevalence in ticks applied. This
implies that onward transmission in cattle occurs with this parasite, with important
implications for causation of severe theileriosis in cattle. Tick infections did not occur
following feeding on calves recovered from buffalo derived T parva Bally Vaughan
isolate or with T. parva Avery isolete. Infections with field parasites were found to
result in more efficient transmission of Theileria parasites to ticks than the Bolvac®
vaccine stock; the former could be associated with the more persistent piroplasm
parasitaemia in the recovered animals and the severity of the Theileria clinical reactions. PCR using p 1 04 primer sequences for rhoptry I microneme antigens of T.
parva was the most sensitive indicator of carrier status. Clinical signs upon infection
were not correlated with persistence of infection; carriage of parasite DNA occurred
irrespective of initial severity. The IF A test was validated using sera from the carrier
animals and naive animals pre-infection. The IFAT titre required to detect all infected
animals was 1:160, at which the test had a specificity of only 64.63%. An IFAT cutoff
titre of 1:320 resulted in a sensitivity and specificity of 90.49.% and 88.06%
respectively. The current cut-off used in Zimbabwe (1 :640) resulted in 100%
specificity, but sensitivity of only 64.63%. The PCR employed provided a highly
sensitive method for determining T parva infection, was more sensitive than IF AT
(cut-off 1 :640) and tick pick up. At least 71.7% of the samples tested post infection
were positive by PCR compared to the 44% positives by IFAT at a cut-off of 1:640.
Only 15% of the tick application experiments were positive compared to the 80.6%
PCR positive tests and 38.9% IFAT positives when the tests were carried out
synchronously.
en
dc.description.abstract
Each of the isolates resulted in a carrier state detectable by PCR and this lasted for at
least 500 days, with Theileria transmission to ticks recorded up to 456 days post
infection. This is longer than recorded in previous studies in Zimbabwe. These
results suggest that carrier status is the normal state following infection. Indications
are that T parva Boler:U is the most suitable immunising parasite stock; although T
parva Avery and Bally Vaughan infections did not result in onward transmission to
ticks, these parasites are of higher pathogenicity which would be disadvantageous in
vaccination.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/35643
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
protozoan parasite
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dc.subject
livestock
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dc.subject
parasitaemia
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dc.subject
Polymerase Chain Reaction
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dc.subject
PCR
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dc.subject
Indirect fluorescent antibody test
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dc.subject
IFAT
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dc.subject
R. appendiculatus
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dc.title
Carrier state studies in Theileria parva infected cattle in Zimbabwe
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
MPhil Master of Philosophy
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