Mj. Aisa et al., DIAGNOSTIC POTENTIAL OF WESTERN-BLOT-ANALYSIS OF SERA FROM DOGS WITH LEISHMANIASIS IN ENDEMIC AREAS AND SIGNIFICANCE OF THE PATTERN, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 58(2), 1998, pp. 154-159
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath","Tropical Medicine
Serum samples collected from 237 dogs in Catalonia (northeastern Spain
) were screened by Western blot analysis to detect the presence of ant
ibodies specific to different Leishmania infantum polypeptide fraction
s. Leishmaniasis was confirmed in 72 of these dogs by direct examinati
on and/or culture. Another 165 animals from the Priorat region were st
udied periodically for 2-8 years between 1987 and 1995, giving a total
of 565 determinations. A control group of 93 dogs from nonendemic are
as was also studied. Sera from dogs with leishmaniasis recognized anti
gens with molecular weights ranging from 12 to 85 kD. The most sensiti
ve antigens were those of 70, 65, 46, 30, 28, 14, and 12 kD, which wer
e recognized by 75%, 75%, 78%, 75%, 81%, 79%, and 75%, respectively, o
f the sera from dogs with positive parasitologic examination results.
Antigens of 70 and 65 kD were also recognized by two dogs from nonende
mic areas. Antigens of 14 and 12 kD were the first to be recognized by
sera of asymptomatic dogs with titers less than the cut-off value of
the dot-ELISA that increased during the longitudinal study, and the pr
esence of antibodies specific for these fractions was observed for up
to six years before seroconversion observed by dot-ELISA. These antibo
dies were also the first to disappear in dogs in which the disease was
self-limited. The study corroborates the high sensitivity and specifi
city of Western blots in the diagnosis of canine leishmaniasis when th
e bands of low molecular weight (less than 46 kD) are considered, and
indicates that fractions of 14 and 12 kD are useful in detecting early
forms of the disease.