| Literature DB >> 22776779 |
François Poumarat1, Dominique Le Grand, Patrice Gaurivaud, Emilie Gay, Myriam Chazel, Yvette Game, Dominique Bergonier.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Contagious agalactia (CA) of sheep and goats caused by Mycoplasma agalactiae is a widely occurring economically important disease that is difficult to control. The ELISA is commonly used for the serological detection of CA but it has some limitations and the performance of the available tests have not been properly evaluated.Two commercial ELISA kits are widely used, one involving a fusion protein as target antigen and the other a total antigen. The objectives were to compare these tests by evaluating:i. Their diagnostic sensitivity and specificity, the relevance of the recommended cut-off points, the correlation between the two tests, and, the correlation between serology data and the milk shedding of M. agalatiae;ii. The influence of extrinsic factors such as the targeted animal species, geographical origin of the samples, intra-specific variability of M. agalactiae and concurrent mycoplasma infections.A sample of 5900 animals from 211 farms with continuous CA monitoring for 20 years and no prior vaccination history was used. The infection status was known from prior bacteriological, epidemiological and serological monitoring with a complementary immunoblotting test.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22776779 PMCID: PMC3439703 DOI: 10.1186/1746-6148-8-109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Literature data regarding the diagnostic specificity and sensitivity of ELISA tests used to detect antibodies against
| Anses Sophia Antipolis France (a) | Total antigen 12 strains mixture | 94% | 48% | 1017 sheep sera in 52 flocks from the French Pyrénées-Atlantiques department | [ |
| Intervet(CHEKit®)(a) | Total antigen PG2 reference strain | 99% | 72% | 1017 sheep sera in 52 flocks from the French Pyrénées-Atlantiques department | [ |
| | | 99% | 76% | 30 goat sera collected from an infected herd and 97 uninfected sheep sera from New Zealand | [ |
| | | 76% | 74% | 223 CA infected and 120 CA free sheep from Italy | [ |
| POURQUIER-ELISA | Fusion protein P48 | 99% | 82% | 1017 sheep sera in 52 flocks from the French Pyrénées-Atlantiques department | [ |
| | | 100% | 56% | 30 goat sera collected from an infected herd and 97 uninfected sheep sera from New Zealand | [ |
| | | - | 57% | 223 CA infected and 120 CA free sheep from Italy | [ |
| Italy (c) | Fusion proteins P80 and P55 | 97% | 94% | 223 CA infected and 120 CA free sheep from Italy | [ |
| Brazil (c) | Total antigen Unknown strain | 95% | 77 | 86 sera from 44 bacteriologically positive and 42 bacteriologically negative Brazilian goats | [ |
(a) Formerly used commercial kit, (b) Test currently marketed and included in the study.
(c) Non commercial tests.
CA: contagious agalactia.
Prevalence ofinfection and diagnostic sensitivity of TA- and P48-ELISA kits in six infected flocks
| 1 | 272 | 73 | 1 | 76 (206) | 24 (64) | 96 (70) | [88–99] | 34 (25) | [24–46] |
| 2 | 460 | 217 | 1 | 68 (312) | 26 (119) | 89 (193) | [84–93] | 38 (82) | [31–45] |
| 3 | 250 | 55 | 2 | 78 (194) | 24 (59) | 100 (55) | [94–100] | 62 (34) | [48–75] |
| 4 | 418 | 93 | 2 | 35 (147) | 28 (119) | 52 (48) | [41–62] | 54 (50) | [43–64] |
| 5 | 473 | 59 | 3 | 49 (230) | 40 (188) | 75 (44) | [62–85] | 71 (42) | [58–82] |
| 6 | 292 | 112 | 8 | 77 (226) | 80 (234) | 93 (14) | [86–97] | 96 (107) | [90–99] |
| Total | |||||||||
(a) % of sero-positive animals in each flock.
(b) % of sero-positives in infected animals.
(c) Number of ewes that shed M. agalactiae (as determined by PCR testing of individual composite milk samples) at least once during four successive tests 5, 4, 3 and 1.5 months prior to blood sampling that took place 6 months after the beginning of lactation.
(d) Number of years between the present and first time M. agalactiae milk positivity was detected in the flock.
(e) Number of sero-positive animals in each flock.
(f) Exact binomial test distribution.
(g) Number of sero-positives in infected animals.
Diagnostic specificity of TA- and P48-ELISA kits for five uninfected sheep or goat populations
| | | | | | | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goat | Poitou-Charentes | Non specific to CA | Very low prevalence | High prevalence | 256 | ||||
| Goat | Haute-Savoie | Specific to | Disease-free for the last 10 years | Unknown | 1381 | ||||
| Goat | Béarn | Specific to | Disease-free for the last 10 years | Unknown | 275 | ||||
| Sheep | Béarn | Specific to | Disease-free for the last 10 years | None (or very low) | 604 | ||||
| Sheep | Tarn | None | CA never reported | None (or very low) | 1195 | ||||
(a) Exact binomial distribution.
M.m.capri = M. mycoides subsp.capri, CA: contagious agalactia.
Figure 1Immunoblotting profiles of sheep sera collected in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department.A: sera from infected reference animals, B: sera from uninfected reference animals, C: sera from flocks thought to be uninfected but bordering newly infected flocks. Lane T: positive reference serum (PAL97). Black arrows indicate bands close to 80, 48, 40, 30 or 27 kDa. Total proteins from M. agalactiae PG2 reference strain clone 55.5 [14] were used as antigen.
Figure 2Kinetics of serological responses in goats inoculated experimentally with three strains of (A) Examples of immunoblotting obtained after inoculation: a) with PG2 reference strain; b) with 5632 strain; c) with14628 strain. Lane: 1 = J0, 2 = J + 6, 3 = J + 9, 4 = J + 12, 5 = J + 16, 6 = J + 19, 7 = J + 22, 8 = J + 30, days after first inoculation. Lane T: positive reference serum PAL97. Total proteins from the of M. agalactiae reference strain PG2 (clone 55–5) [14] were used as antigen. (B and C) Distribution of serum titers obtained respectively with TA-ELISA and with P48-ELISA. PG2: green curve, 5632: red curve, 14628: blue curve. Each curve corresponds to the average response of two animals for strains PG2 and 5632, three animals for strain 14628. Each point is an average of four repeated measures per animal. The manufacturer’s suggested cut-off point is represented by the purple broken line. * Days of inoculation are symbolized with a star. J + x: number of days after the initial inoculation.
Figure 3Distribution of serum titers obtained with TA-ELISA in four distinct sheep populations: - green curve: 1195 sheep from the infection-free population from the Tarn department; - red curve: 604 sheep from theinfection-free population from the Béarn region;- blue curve: 609 ewes that shedin at least one out of four successive individual milk analyses 5, 4, 3 and 1.5 months prior to blood sampling for serological testing; - black curve: 783 ewes from six infected flocks from the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department that tested positive with P48-ELISA. Titer distribution is expressed as the percentage of animals from a given population falling into in each titer category. The manufacturer’s suggested cut-off point is represented by the purple broken line. The shaded area corresponds to a +/−20% confidence interval on a single measurement. The maximum titer frequencies for the Tarn and Béarn populations were respectively at 0.5 (32% of the population) and at 0.4 (25% of the population).
Figure 4Distribution of serum titers obtained with P48-ELISA in four distinct sheep populations: - green curve: 1195 sheep from theinfection-free population from the Tarn department;red curve: 604 sheep from theinfection-free population from the Béarn region; - blue curve: 609 ewes that shedat least one out of four successive individual milk analyses 5, 4, 3 and 1.5 months prior to blood sampling for serological testing; - black curve: 1090 animals from six infected flocks from the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department that tested positive with TA-ELISA. Titer distribution is expressed as the percentage of animals from a given population falling into each titer category. The manufacturer’s suggested cut-off point is represented by the purple broken line. The shaded area corresponds to a +/−20% confidence interval on a single measurement. The maximum titer frequencies for the Tarn and Béarn populations were respectively at 10% (97% of the population) and at 10% (57% of the population).