Literature DB >> 14339267

USE OF ANTIBIOTICS IN THE PREPARATION OF CANINE KIDNEY TISSUE CULTURE VACCINES TO ELIMINATE LEPTOSPIRAL INFECTION HAZARDS.

D ELLISON, J RIGG, S J MCCONNELL, A D ALEXANDER, R H YAGER.   

Abstract

The potential leptospiral infection hazard in the use of vaccines prepared from canine kidney monolayer cultures was studied. Cell cultures were prepared from kidneys of dogs experimentally infected with Leptospira serotype canicola. Viable leptospires were found in kidney cell suspensions at the time of seeding, surviving trypsinization either at room temperature for approximately 2 hr or overnight at 4 C, even in the presence of antibiotics. In tissue cultures maintained without antibiotics, leptospires were cultured up to the time of involution of cells at 25 to 34 days of incubation. Cytopathogenic effects of leptospires on cultured kidney cells were not noted; neither was growth of leptospires remarkable. Generally, the leptospire culture titer decreased to 10(-4) or 10(-5) at the 4th hr or 1st day of incubation to 10(-1) or negative by the 30th or 34th day of incubation. The addition of either a combination of penicillin (100 units per ml) plus streptomycin (100 mug/ml) or polymyxin B (50 units per ml) plus dihydrostreptomycin (100 mug/ml) to seeding cell suspensions resulted in the elimination of viable leptospires by the 4th hr of incubation. From cell cultures treated with neomycin (100 mug/ml) or chloramphenicol (100 mug/ml), leptospires were recovered, respectively, after 24 and 48 hr, but not thereafter. It was apparent that antibiotics, particularly the combination of polymyxin B and dihydrostreptomycin, could be effectively used to eliminate leptospires in tissue culture. Other antibiotics with known antileptospiral activities probably would be effective also. If antibiotics are not used in canine kidney tissue culture employed for viral vaccine preparations, rigid testing for the presence of leptospires in donor dogs and tissue-culture vaccine is indicated.

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Keywords:  ANTIBIOTICS; BACTERIAL VACCINES; CHLORAMPHENICOL; CYTOPATHOGENIC EFFECT, VIRAL; DOG DISEASES; EXPERIMENTAL LAB STUDY; LEPTOSPIRA CANICOLA; NEOMYCIN; PENICILLIN; PHARMACOLOGY; POLYMYXIN; STREPTOMYCIN; TISSUE CULTURE; TRYPSIN

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Year:  1965        PMID: 14339267      PMCID: PMC1058303          DOI: 10.1128/am.13.4.595-599.1965

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Microbiol        ISSN: 0003-6919


  5 in total

1.  The importance of urinary antibodies in the diagnosis of leptospirosis.

Authors:  R D STUART
Journal:  Can J Microbiol       Date:  1956-05       Impact factor: 2.419

2.  Observations on the prevalence of leptospirosis in canine populations of the United States.

Authors:  A D ALEXANDER; C A GLEISER; P MALNATI; H YODER
Journal:  Am J Hyg       Date:  1957-01

3.  The treatment of leptospiroses, especially leptospirosis icterohaemorrhagica, with some antibiotics.

Authors:  P H VAN THIEL
Journal:  Doc Med Geogr Trop       Date:  1957-12

4.  Simplified method of dispersion of monkey kidney cells with trypsin.

Authors:  D BODIAN
Journal:  Virology       Date:  1956-08       Impact factor: 3.616

5.  Chemotherapy of experimental leptospirosis with chloramphenicol, (chloromycetin), subtilin and penicillin G.

Authors:  M C DUNN; P E THOMPSON
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  1953 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 5.226

  5 in total
  2 in total

1.  Growth of Leptospira pomona and Its Effect on Various Tissue Culture Systems.

Authors:  R E Miller; N G Miller; R J White
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  1966-08       Impact factor: 3.490

2.  On the contamination of cell cultures by Leptospira biflexa.

Authors:  J J Tumilowicz; A D Alexander; K Stafford
Journal:  In Vitro       Date:  1974 Sep-Oct
  2 in total

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