Use of tick cell culture-derived Anaplasma marginale antigen in a competitive ELISA for serodiagnosis of Anaplasmosis

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Abstract

Anaplasma marginale was propagated in a continuous tick cell line and detergent-solubilized infected cells were used as antigen in a competitive ELISA (C-ELISA) for detection of Anaplasma-specific antibody in bovine sera. Positive control sera competed well (< 35% inhibition) with an A. marginale-specific monoclonal antibody for binding to this antigen, while negative sera failed to compete (< 35% inhibition). The C-ELISA was compared to the standard complement-fixation test (CFT) using 2,208 bovine sera. Overall, C-ELISA was more sensitive than CFT (24.9% versus 9.4%), mainly because CFT yielded 'suspicious' or 'anti-complementary' results in 10.5% of the sera and also failed to identify several vaccinated and carrier cattle that were C-ELISA-positive. The apparent agreement between CFT and C-ELISA was 89.6% and the kappa value was 0.6. These results show that this C-ELISA would be a suitable replacement of the CFT as the standard test for detection of A. marginale antibody.

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Saliki, J. T., Blouin, E. F., Rodgers, S. J., & Kocan, K. M. (1998). Use of tick cell culture-derived Anaplasma marginale antigen in a competitive ELISA for serodiagnosis of Anaplasmosis. In Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (Vol. 849, pp. 273–281). Blackwell Publishing Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.1998.tb11059.x

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