Literature DB >> 23273932

Reproduction of bovine neonatal pancytopenia (BNP) by feeding pooled colostrum reveals variable alloantibody damage to different haematopoietic lineages.

Charlotte R Bell1, Mara S Rocchi, Mark P Dagleish, Eleonora Melzi, Keith T Ballingall, Maira Connelly, Morag G Kerr, Sandra F E Scholes, Kim Willoughby.   

Abstract

Bovine neonatal pancytopenia (BNP) is a recently described haemorrhagic disease of calves characterised by thrombocytopenia, leucopenia and bone marrow depletion. Feeding colostrum from cows that have previously produced a BNP affected calf has been shown to induce the disease in some calves, leading to the hypothesis that alloantibodies in colostrum from dams of affected calves mediate destruction of blood and bone marrow cells in the recipient calves. The aims of the current experimental study were first to confirm the role of colostrum-derived antibody in mediating the disease and second to investigate the haematopoietic cell lineages and maturation stages depleted by the causative antibodies. Clinical, haematological and pathological changes were examined in 5 calves given a standardised pool of colostrum from known BNP dams, and 5 control calves given an equivalent pool of colostrum from non-BNP dams. All calves fed challenge colostrum showed progressive depletion of bone marrow haematopoietic cells and haematological changes consistent with the development of BNP. Administration of a standardised dose of the same colostrum pool to each calf resulted in a consistent response within the groups, allowing detailed interpretation of the cellular changes not previously described. Analyses of blood and serial bone marrow changes revealed evidence of differential effects on different blood cell lineages. Peripheral blood cell depletion was confined to leucocytes and platelets, while bone marrow damage occurred to the primitive precursors and lineage committed cells of the thrombocyte, lymphocyte and monocyte lineages, but only to the more primitive precursors in the neutrophil, erythrocyte and eosinophil lineages. Such differences between lineages may reflect cell type-dependent differences in levels of expression or conformational nature of the target antigens.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23273932     DOI: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2012.12.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vet Immunol Immunopathol        ISSN: 0165-2427            Impact factor:   2.046


  6 in total

1.  Calf-level factors associated with bovine neonatal pancytopenia--a multi-country case-control study.

Authors:  Bryony A Jones; Carola Sauter-Louis; Joerg Henning; Alexander Stoll; Mirjam Nielen; Gerdien Van Schaik; Anja Smolenaars; Matthijs Schouten; Ingrid den Uijl; Christine Fourichon; Raphael Guatteo; Aurélien Madouasse; Simon Nusinovici; Piet Deprez; Sarne De Vliegher; Jozef Laureyns; Richard Booth; Jackie M Cardwell; Dirk U Pfeiffer
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-12-02       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Bovine Neonatal Pancytopenia is a heritable trait of the dam rather than the calf and correlates with the magnitude of vaccine induced maternal alloantibodies not the MHC haplotype.

Authors:  Lindert Benedictus; Henny G Otten; Gerdien van Schaik; Walter G J van Ginkel; Henri C M Heuven; Mirjam Nielen; Victor P M G Rutten; Ad P Koets
Journal:  Vet Res       Date:  2014-12-17       Impact factor: 3.683

3.  Evidence of a high incidence of subclinically affected calves in a herd of cattle with fatal cases of Bovine Neonatal Pancytopenia (BNP).

Authors:  Charlotte R Bell; Morag G Kerr; Philip R Scott; W Ivan Morrison; Helen Brown
Journal:  BMC Vet Res       Date:  2014-10-08       Impact factor: 2.741

4.  Priming Cross-Protective Bovine Viral Diarrhea Virus-Specific Immunity Using Live-Vectored Mosaic Antigens.

Authors:  Shehnaz Lokhandwala; Xin Fang; Suryakant D Waghela; Jocelyn Bray; Leo M Njongmeta; Andy Herring; Karim W Abdelsalam; Christopher Chase; Waithaka Mwangi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-01-18       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Pathogenicity of Bovine Neonatal Pancytopenia-associated vaccine-induced alloantibodies correlates with Major Histocompatibility Complex class I expression.

Authors:  Lindert Benedictus; Rutger D Luteijn; Henny Otten; Robert Jan Lebbink; Peter J S van Kooten; Emmanuel J H J Wiertz; Victor P M G Rutten; Ad P Koets
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2015-08-03       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Herd-level animal management factors associated with the occurrence of bovine neonatal pancytopenia in calves in a multi-country study.

Authors:  Carola Sauter-Louis; Bryony A Jones; Jörg Henning; Alexander Stoll; Mirjam Nielen; Gerdien Van Schaik; Anja Smolenaars; Matthijs Schouten; Ingrid den Uijl; Christine Fourichon; Raphael Guatteo; Aurélien Madouasse; Simon Nusinovici; Piet Deprez; Sarne De Vliegher; Jozef Laureyns; Richard Booth; Jacqueline M Cardwell; Dirk U Pfeiffer
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-07-05       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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