18 results on '"Corde, Y."'
Search Results
2. Estimating the probability of freedom from bovine brucellosis in the Galapagos Islands
- Author
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Gioia, G., primary, Vinueza, R. L., additional, Cruz, M., additional, Jay, M., additional, Corde, Y., additional, Marsot, M., additional, and Zanella, G., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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3. Interlaboratory ring trial to evaluate CFT proficiency of European laboratories for diagnosis of glanders in equids
- Author
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Laroucau, K., primary, Colaneri, C., additional, Jaÿ, M., additional, Corde, Y., additional, Drapeau, A., additional, Durand, B., additional, Zientara, S., additional, and Beck, C., additional
- Published
- 2016
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4. Estimating the probability of freedom from bovine brucellosis in the Galapagos Islands.
- Author
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Gioia, G., Vinueza, R. L., Cruz, M., Jay, M., Corde, Y., Marsot, M., and Zanella, G.
- Abstract
Bovine brucellosis is a worldwide zoonotic disease that still burdens several countries in the Mediterranean, Asia, Africa and Latin America. Although the disease is present in Ecuador, the Galapagos Islands seem to be free from the disease based on a survey conducted in 1997 where all tested animals showed negative results. This study aimed at estimating the probability of freedom from brucellosis in this Ecuadorian province in 2014. A survey was implemented on the three main cattle-producing islands of the province: Santa Cruz, Isabela and San Cristóbal. Thirty-three cattle farms and 410 cattle were tested for brucellosis using the Rose Bengal test and indirect ELISA. All animals showed negative results for both tests. Probability of freedom was estimated at 98%, 91% and 88% for Santa Cruz, Isabela and San Cristóbal, respectively, considering a herd-level design seroprevalence of 20% and animal-level design seroprevalence of 15%, and assuming a perfect specificity of the survey. The negative results found in 1997 and present surveys suggest that the Galapagos Islands are free from bovine brucellosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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5. AListeria monocytogenesStrain Is Still Virulent despite Nonfunctional Major Virulence Genes
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Roche, S. M., primary, Grépinet, O., additional, Corde, Y., additional, Teixeira, A. P., additional, Kerouanton, A., additional, Témoin, S., additional, Mereghetti, L., additional, Brisabois, A., additional, and Velge, P., additional
- Published
- 2009
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6. Seroprevalence and Risk Factors of Brucellosis in Ruminants in Dhofar Province in Southern Oman.
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Al-Marzooqi W, Elshafie EI, Al-Toobi A, Al-Hamrashdi A, Al-Kharousi K, El-Tahir H, Jay M, Corde Y, and ElTahir Y
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of the present work was to raise awareness of Brucella infection and emphasize the use of serological tests for screening and confirmation of the presence of the infection in different localities in the Dhofar region in the Sultanate of Oman., Methods: A seroprevalence of Brucella infection in naturally infected livestock was undertaken in 50 farms (a total of 434 sera, 207 goats, 84 sheep, 54 cattle, and 89 camels) from different wilayat of the Dhofar region in the southern part of Oman. Rose Bengal (RBT), complement fixation (CFT), and indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (I-ELISA) tests were used to determine the presence of Brucella antibodies. Statistical analysis (Pearson chi-square, binary logistic regression, and univariate logistic regression) was used to investigate the significance between the prevalence and the categorical risk factors individually, with two or more levels (animal species, animal condition, and or location)., Results: Our results show that the overall seroprevalence based on CFT, RBT, and I-ELISA was 3% (13/424, CI: 1.8-5.1%), 4.8% (21/434, CI: 3.1-7.3%), and 8% (35/434, CI: 5.8-10.9%), respectively. The highest seroprevalence was reported in goats (13% (27/207)) and animals from East Jabal (13% (21/161)), whereas the lowest was recorded in camels (3.4% (3/89)) and animals from deserts (1.4% (1/69)). Parameters such as the positive predictive value (PPV) and the negative predictive value (NPV) showed that the sensitivity of I-ELISA and CFT based on the RBT test was 61.9% and 57.1%, respectively, whereas the specificity of I-ELISA (94.6%) was less than that of CFT (97.33%)., Conclusion: We concluded that three tests are confirmatory for the presence of Brucella infection., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Waleed Al-Marzooqi et al.)
- Published
- 2022
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7. A New in Silico Antibody Similarity Measure Both Identifies Large Sets of Epitope Binders with Distinct CDRs and Accurately Predicts Off-Target Reactivity.
- Author
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Musnier A, Bourquard T, Vallet A, Mathias L, Bruneau G, Ayoub MA, Travert O, Corde Y, Gallay N, Boulo T, Cortes S, Watier H, Crépieux P, Reiter E, and Poupon A
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Epitopes, Hemagglutinins, Humans, Influenza, Human, Single-Domain Antibodies
- Abstract
Developing a therapeutic antibody is a long, tedious, and expensive process. Many obstacles need to be overcome, such as biophysical properties (issues of solubility, stability, weak production yields, etc.), as well as cross-reactivity and subsequent toxicity, which are major issues. No in silico method exists today to solve such issues. We hypothesized that if we were able to properly measure the similarity between the CDRs of antibodies (Ab) by considering not only their evolutionary proximity (sequence identity) but also their structural features, we would be able to identify families of Ab recognizing similar epitopes. As a consequence, Ab within the family would share the property to recognize their targets, which would allow (i) to identify off-targets and forecast the cross-reactions, and (ii) to identify new Ab specific for a given target. Testing our method on 238D2, an antagonistic anti-CXCR4 nanobody, we were able to find new nanobodies against CXCR4 and to identify influenza hemagglutinin as an off-target of 238D2.
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- 2022
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8. Facilitating mGluR4 activity reverses the long-term deleterious consequences of chronic morphine exposure in male mice.
- Author
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Becker JAJ, Pellissier LP, Corde Y, Laboute T, Léauté A, Gandía J, and Le Merrer J
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- Animals, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Morphine pharmacology, Nucleus Accumbens, Cocaine, Receptors, Metabotropic Glutamate
- Abstract
Understanding the neurobiological underpinnings of abstinence from drugs of abuse is critical to allow better recovery and ensure relapse prevention in addicted subjects. By comparing the long-term transcriptional consequences of morphine and cocaine exposure, we identified the metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 4 (mGluR4) as a promising pharmacological target in morphine abstinence. We evaluated the behavioral and molecular effects of facilitating mGluR4 activity in abstinent mice. Transcriptional regulation of marker genes of medium spiny neurons (MSNs) allowed best discriminating between 4-week morphine and cocaine abstinence in the nucleus accumbens (NAc). Among these markers, Grm4, encoding mGluR4, displayed down-regulated expression in the caudate putamen and NAc of morphine, but not cocaine, abstinent mice. Chronic administration of the mGluR4 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) VU0155041 (2.5 and 5 mg/kg) rescued social behavior, normalized stereotypies and anxiety and blunted locomotor sensitization in morphine abstinent mice. This treatment improved social preference but increased stereotypies in cocaine abstinent mice. Finally, the beneficial behavioral effects of VU0155041 treatment in morphine abstinent mice were correlated with restored expression of key MSN and neural activity marker genes in the NAc. This study reports that chronic administration of the mGluR4 PAM VU0155041 relieves long-term deleterious consequences of morphine exposure. It illustrates the neurobiological differences between opiate and psychostimulant abstinence and points to pharmacological repression of excessive activity of D2-MSNs in the NAc as a promising therapeutic lever in drug addiction.
- Published
- 2021
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9. Accurate determination of epitope for antibodies with unknown 3D structures.
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Tahir S, Bourquard T, Musnier A, Jullian Y, Corde Y, Omahdi Z, Mathias L, Reiter E, Crépieux P, Bruneau G, and Poupon A
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- Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized chemistry, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized metabolism, Antigens genetics, Antigens metabolism, Binding Sites, Antibody, ErbB Receptors immunology, ErbB Receptors metabolism, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Interleukin-4 Receptor alpha Subunit genetics, Interleukin-4 Receptor alpha Subunit metabolism, Mutation, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Structure-Activity Relationship, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized immunology, Antigens immunology, Epitope Mapping, Epitopes, Interleukin-4 Receptor alpha Subunit immunology, Molecular Docking Simulation
- Abstract
MAbTope is a docking-based method for the determination of epitopes. It has been used to successfully determine the epitopes of antibodies with known 3D structures. However, during the antibody discovery process, this structural information is rarely available. Although we already have evidence that homology models of antibodies could be used instead of their 3D structure, the choice of the template, the methodology for homology modeling and the resulting performance still have to be clarified. Here, we show that MAbTope has the same performance when working with homology models of the antibodies as compared to crystallographic structures. Moreover, we show that even low-quality models can be used. We applied MAbTope to determine the epitope of dupilumab, an anti- interleukin 4 receptor alpha subunit therapeutic antibody of unknown 3D structure, that we validated experimentally. Finally, we show how the MAbTope-determined epitopes for a series of antibodies targeting the same protein can be used to predict competitions, and demonstrate the accuracy with an experimentally validated example.3D: three-dimensionalRMSD: root mean square deviationCDR: complementary-determining regionCPU: central processing unitsVH: heavy chain variable regionVL: light chain variable regionscFv: single-chain variable fragmentsVHH: single-chain antibody variable regionIL4Rα: Interleukin 4 receptor alpha chainSPR: surface plasmon resonancePDB: protein data bankHEK293: Human embryonic kidney 293 cellsEDTA: Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acidFBS: Fetal bovine serumANOVA: Analysis of varianceEGFR: Epidermal growth factor receptorPE: PhycoerythrinAPC: AllophycocyaninFSC: forward scatterSSC: side scatterWT: wild typeKeywords: MAbTope, Epitope Mapping, Molecular docking, Antibody modeling, Antibody-antigen docking.
- Published
- 2021
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10. Correction to: Investigation on Brucella infection in farm animals in Saham, Sultanate of Oman with reference to human brucellosis outbreak.
- Author
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ElTahir Y, Al-Farsi A, Al-Marzooqi W, Al-Toobi A, Gaafar OM, Jay M, Corde Y, Bose S, Al-Hamrashdi A, Al-Kharousi K, Rajamony S, Asi MN, Al-Saqri N, AlBusaidi R, Elshafie EI, and Johnson EH
- Abstract
The original article [1] incorrectly presents final author, Eugene H. Johnson's name incorrectly whereby middle initial, 'H.' is mistakenly presented as a Family Name.
- Published
- 2020
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11. The orphan receptor GPR88 blunts the signaling of opioid receptors and multiple striatal GPCRs.
- Author
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Laboute T, Gandía J, Pellissier LP, Corde Y, Rebeillard F, Gallo M, Gauthier C, Léauté A, Diaz J, Poupon A, Kieffer BL, Le Merrer J, and Becker JA
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Receptors, Opioid genetics, beta-Arrestins metabolism, Corpus Striatum metabolism, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled genetics, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled metabolism, Receptors, Opioid metabolism, Signal Transduction genetics
- Abstract
GPR88 is an orphan G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) considered as a promising therapeutic target for neuropsychiatric disorders; its pharmacology, however, remains scarcely understood. Based on our previous report of increased delta opioid receptor activity in Gpr88 null mice, we investigated the impact of GPR88 co-expression on the signaling of opioid receptors in vitro and revealed that GPR88 inhibits the activation of both their G protein- and β-arrestin-dependent signaling pathways. In Gpr88 knockout mice, morphine-induced locomotor sensitization, withdrawal and supra-spinal analgesia were facilitated, consistent with a tonic inhibitory action of GPR88 on µOR signaling. We then explored GPR88 interactions with more striatal versus non-neuronal GPCRs, and revealed that GPR88 can decrease the G protein-dependent signaling of most receptors in close proximity, but impedes β-arrestin recruitment by all receptors tested. Our study unravels an unsuspected buffering role of GPR88 expression on GPCR signaling, with intriguing consequences for opioid and striatal functions., Competing Interests: TL, JG, LP, YC, FR, MG, CG, AL, JD, AP, BK, JL, JB No competing interests declared, (© 2020, Laboute et al.)
- Published
- 2020
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12. Investigation on Brucella infection in farm animals in Saham, Sultanate of Oman with reference to human brucellosis outbreak.
- Author
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ElTahir Y, Al-Farsi A, Al-Marzooqi W, Al-Toobi A, M Gaafar O, Jay M, Corde Y, Bose S, Al-Hamrashdi A, Al-Kharousi K, Rajamony S, Asi MN, Al-Saqri N, AlBusaidi R, I Elshafie E, and Johnson EH
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Brucellosis epidemiology, Brucellosis microbiology, Humans, Oman epidemiology, Brucella immunology, Brucellosis veterinary, Disease Outbreaks veterinary, Livestock microbiology, Serologic Tests
- Abstract
Background: The objective of this study was to investigate Brucella infection in farm animals in Saham, Oman, with reference to a survey carried out by the Ministry of Agriculture & Fisheries (MAF) for Brucellosis during the period of May to July 2016 in Saham, following an outbreak of human brucellosis. We wanted to apply different serological, bacteriological and molecular tests in a time frame (phase 1, 2 & 3) with reference to the pivotal time of a human brucellosis outbreak to ascertain the status of the disease in Saham area where the MAF survey was conducted. Blood samples were collected from farm animals and sera were screened in parallel for Brucella antibodies using different serological tests., Results: Using the RBT test, phase 1 sera showed seropositivity in sheep at 2.6%, (95% CI: 0.5-13.5%), in camel (5.9%, 1.1-27.0%), but not in sera from goats and cattle (0%). Using I-ELISA, seropositivity in goat was 3.1% (0.6-15.8%), with no positive sheep and cattle. Using c-ELISA for camel we found a seropositivity of 5.9% (1.1-27.0%). Furthermore, CFT seropositivity in goats was 21.9% (CI: 11.3-38.9), cattle and sheep sera were negative and camel was 5.9% (1.1-27.0%). In phase 2, the seropositivity in goats was 1.9% (1.4-2.6%), sheep 4.5% (3.5-5.8%), cattle 1.1%, (0.5-2.3%) and camels 18.2% (5.1-47.7%), Phase 3 sera were collected 6 months after the human brucellosis outbreak. With RBT, the seropositivity in goats was 3% (1.0-8.5%), sheep 2% (0.6-7.1%) cattle 1% (0.2-5.5%). With I-ELISA, goats & camels were negative, sheep were 3% (1.0-8.5%) and cattle 1% (0.2-5.5%). Moreover, B. melitensis was isolated from a bronchial lymph node of the RBT and I-ELISA seropositive cow and confirmed by Multiplex PCR and biochemical tests., Conclusion: Using a retrospective study analysis of animal sera and following up after a human brucellosis outbreak, the present study showed a slight decrease in seropositivity of infected animals after the MAF implemented test and slaughter policy. The most interesting finding in this study was the isolation, identification and molecular characterization of Brucella melitensis in a cow (spillover), which is not a preferential host for Brucella melitensis.
- Published
- 2019
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13. Genome Sequences of Five Brucella canis Strains Isolated from Different Countries throughout the World.
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Girault G, Ferreira Vicente A, Corde Y, Souza Ribeiro Mioni M, Borges Keid L, Jay M, Megid J, and Mick V
- Abstract
Canine brucellosis is a major underestimated zoonosis that remains endemic in many areas of the world. A recent phylogeographic investigation including 53 Brucella canis field isolates revealed the existence of two major lineages worldwide. Here, we report genome sequencing of 5 representative isolates of different clades identified in this study.
- Published
- 2018
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14. New insights into phylogeography of worldwide Brucella canis isolates by comparative genomics-based approaches: focus on Brazil.
- Author
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Ferreira Vicente A, Girault G, Corde Y, Souza Ribeiro Mioni M, Borges Keid L, Jay M, Megid J, and Mick V
- Subjects
- Brazil, Brucella canis classification, Brucella canis genetics, Genomics, Phylogeography
- Abstract
Background: Canine brucellosis, due to Brucella canis, is a worldwide zoonosis that remains endemic in South America, including Brazil. Implementation of powerful whole-genome sequencing approaches allowed exploring the Brucella genus considered as monomorphic, with, to date, more than 500 genomes available in public databases. Nevertheless, with under-representation of B. canis genomes -only twenty complete or draft genomes-, lack of knowledge about this species is still considerable. This report describes a comparative genomics-based phylogeographic investigation of 53 B. canis strains, including 28 isolates paired-end sequenced in this work., Results: Obtained results allow identifying a SNP panel species-specific to B. canis of 1086 nucleotides. In addition, high-resolution analyses assess the epidemiological relationship between worldwide isolates. Our findings show worldwide strains are distributed among 2 distinct lineages. One of them seems to be specific to South American strains, including Brazil. B. canis South American strains may be identified by a SNP panel of 15 nucleotides, whereas a 22 SNP panel is sufficient to define contamination origin from Brazil. These results lead to the proposal of a possible spread route for dog brucellosis through South America. Additionally, whole-genome analyses highlight the remarkable genomic stability of B. canis strains over time and the sustainability of the infection in São Paulo over 12 year-period., Conclusions: Significant increase of B. canis genomes available in public databases provides new insights into B. canis infection in South America, including Brazil, as well as in the world, and also offers new perspectives for the Brucella genus largo sensu.
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- 2018
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15. Serological, cultural and molecular evidence of Brucella melitensis infection in goats in Al Jabal Al Akhdar, Sultanate of Oman.
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ElTahir Y, Al Toobi AG, Al-Marzooqi W, Mahgoub O, Jay M, Corde Y, Al Lawati H, Bose S, Al Hamrashdi A, Al Kharousi K, Al-Saqri N, Al Busaidi R, and Johnson EH
- Abstract
Brucellosis, one of the most common zoonotic diseases and has significant public health and economic importance worldwide. Few studies and reports have been performed to estimate the true prevalence of animal brucellosis in the Sultanate of Oman; however, no incidence of the disease was previously reported in Al Jabal Al Akhdar. The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence of brucellosis in goats in eight villages in Al Jebal Al Akhdar, Sultanate of Oman, namely: Al Aqaieb, Al Helailat, Al Ghilayil, Hail Al Hedap, Da'an Al Hamra, Shnoot, Al Qasha'e and Al Sarah, Al Jabal Al Akhdar in the Sultanate of Oman. In this study we used different diagnostic serological tests, namely, RBT, I-ELISA and CFT to study the prevalence of Brucella infection in goats in Al Jabal Al Akhdar. Statistical analysis using Kappa statistics was used to compare the performance of the serological tests. Biochemical tests and species-specific Multiplex PCR were used to identify the brucella species involved in the infection. A structured questionnaire and Chi-square (x
2 ) statistical analysis was used to identify related brucellosis risk factors. This study is the first to reveal brucellosis infection in goats in eight villages in Al Jebal Al Akhdar, Sultanate of Oman, namely: Al Aqaieb, Al Helailat, Al Ghilayil, Hail Al Hedap, Da'an Al Hamra, Shnoot, Al Qasha'e and Al Sarah, with an overall seroprevalence of 11.1%. The study also compared the performance of three different serological tests, namely, RBT, I-ELISA and CFT. Statistical analysis using Kappa statistics showed that the degree of agreement was best seen between RBT and CFT (96%), followed by RBT, I- ELISA (91.4%) and CFT and I- ELISA (89.2%). Biochemical tests and species-specific Multiplex PCR showed the typical profile for B. melitensis. A structured questionnaire and Chi-square (x2 ) statistical analysis indicated that the presence of abortion is the major risk factor for the prevalence of brucellosis, whereas age and sex were not significant factors in the tested animals. Besides, poor knowledge about brucellosis, consumption of unpasteurized milk or milk products, free trade of animals and the introduction of new animal breeds to herds were all contributing risk factors to the prevalence of brucellosis. The prevalence of human brucellosis obtained verbally from pastoralists gave an insight that brucellosis could pose a public health hazard, especially in those high-risk groups, mainly the pastoralists in the study area. Because of their constant and increasing interaction with their animals, pastoralists could be at a high risk of occupational infection., (© 2018 The Authors Veterinary Medicine and Science Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2018
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16. Brucella melitensis in France: persistence in wildlife and probable spillover from Alpine ibex to domestic animals.
- Author
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Mick V, Le Carrou G, Corde Y, Game Y, Jay M, and Garin-Bastuji B
- Subjects
- Animals, Brucella melitensis genetics, Brucellosis epidemiology, Brucellosis microbiology, Cluster Analysis, Disease Outbreaks, France epidemiology, Genetic Markers, Genetic Variation, Genotype, Geography, Phylogeny, Animals, Domestic microbiology, Animals, Wild microbiology, Brucella melitensis physiology, Ecosystem, Goats microbiology
- Abstract
Bovine brucellosis is a major zoonosis, mainly caused by Brucella abortus, more rarely by Brucella melitensis. France has been bovine brucellosis officially-free since 2005 with no cases reported in domestic/wild ruminants since 2003. In 2012, bovine and autochthonous human cases due to B. melitensis biovar 3 (Bmel3) occurred in the French Alps. Epidemiological investigations implemented in wild and domestic ruminants evidenced a high seroprevalence (>45%) in Alpine ibex (Capra ibex); no cases were disclosed in other domestic or wild ruminants, except for one isolated case in a chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra). These results raised the question of a possible persistence/emergence of Brucella in wildlife. The purpose of this study was to assess genetic relationships among the Bmel3 strains historically isolated in humans, domestic and wild ruminants in Southeastern France, over two decades, by the MLVA-panel2B assay, and to propose a possible explanation for the origin of the recent bovine and human infections. Indeed, this genotyping strategy proved to be efficient for this microepidemiological investigation using an interpretation cut-off established for a fine-scale setting. The isolates, from the 2012 domestic/human outbreak harbored an identical genotype, confirming a recent and direct contamination from cattle to human. Interestingly, they clustered not only with isolates from wildlife in 2012, but also with local historical domestic isolates, in particular with the 1999 last bovine case in the same massif. Altogether, our results suggest that the recent bovine outbreak could have originated from the Alpine ibex population. This is the first report of a B. melitensis spillover from wildlife to domestic ruminants and the sustainability of the infection in Alpine ibex. However, this wild population, reintroduced in the 1970s in an almost closed massif, might be considered as a semi-domestic free-ranging herd. Anthropogenic factors could therefore account with the high observed intra-species prevalence.
- Published
- 2014
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17. Exposure of wild boar to Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex in France since 2000 is consistent with the distribution of bovine tuberculosis outbreaks in cattle.
- Author
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Richomme C, Boadella M, Courcoul A, Durand B, Drapeau A, Corde Y, Hars J, Payne A, Fediaevsky A, and Boschiroli ML
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Cattle microbiology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, France epidemiology, Male, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Sus scrofa microbiology, Cattle blood, Disease Outbreaks, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Sus scrofa blood, Tuberculosis, Bovine blood, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission
- Abstract
The Eurasian wild boar (Sus scrofa) is increasingly considered as a relevant actor in the epidemiology of animal tuberculosis (TB). Therefore, monitoring TB in wild boar becomes a key tool for establishing comprehensive control schemes for this disease. To estimate the exposure of free living wild boar to Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC) in France, a bovine-purified protein derivative based ELISA was used to test 2,080 archived serum samples of hunter-harvested animals in 58 French "départements". Two cut-off values were used for diagnostic interpretation: 0.2, recommended by the manufacturer (specificity: 96.43%; sensitivity: 72.6%), and 0.5 (specificity: 100%; sensitivity: 64%). During the same period, at the 0.2 cut-off, global true seroprevalence was 5.9% (IC95%: 4.3%-7.7%) and 76% of the sampled "départements" had seropositive wild boar, including seven cattle TB-free "départements. At the 0.5 cut-off, global true seroprevalence was 2.2% (IC95%: 1.5-3.2) and positive wild boar belonged to 21% of the "départements". All but one of these positive "départements" had reported at least one cattle TB outbreak since 2000. A good consistence between seropositive wild boar and TB outbreaks in cattle was found, especially at the 0.5 cut-off value (the mean distance to the nearest cattle TB outbreak was 13 km and 27 km for seropositive and seronegative wild boar, respectively; P<0.05). The use of an ELISA to detect MTC antibodies in wild boar has permitted the description of the geographic distribution of MTC contact in wild boar in France. Our results suggest that the ELISA could be used as a first screening tool to conduct TB surveillance in wild boar at a population level. High-risk wild boar populations (e.g. overabundant) could be tested and if identified positive by ELISA they should be surveyed in detail by combining pathology and culture.
- Published
- 2013
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18. Assessment of the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of an indirect ELISA kit for the diagnosis of Brucella ovis infection in rams.
- Author
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Praud A, Champion JL, Corde Y, Drapeau A, Meyer L, and Garin-Bastuji B
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- Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Bayes Theorem, Brucellosis diagnosis, Brucellosis microbiology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay methods, France, Male, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sheep, Sheep Diseases diagnosis, Brucella ovis isolation & purification, Brucellosis veterinary, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay veterinary, Sheep Diseases microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Brucella ovis causes an infectious disease responsible for infertility and subsequent economic losses in sheep production. The standard serological test to detect B. ovis infection in rams is the complement fixation test (CFT), which has imperfect sensitivity and specificity in addition to technical drawbacks. Other available tests include the indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (I-ELISA) but no I-ELISA kit has been fully evaluated.The study aimed to compare an I-ELISA kit and the standard CFT. Our study was carried out on serum samples from 4599 rams from the South of France where the disease is enzootic. A Bayesian approach was used to estimate tests characteristics (diagnostic sensitivity, Se and diagnostic specificity, Sp). The tests were then studied together in order to optimise testing strategies to detect B. ovis., Results: After optimising the cut-off values in order to avoid doubtful results without deteriorating the concordance between the results of the two tests, the I-ELISA appeared to be slightly more sensitive than CFT (Se I-ELISA=0.917 [0.822; 0.992], 95% Credibility Interval (CrI) compared to Se CFT=0.860 [0.740; 0.967], 95% CrI). However, CFT was slightly more specific than I-ELISA (Sp CFT=0.988 [0.947; 1.0], 95% CrI) compared to Sp I-ELISA =0.952 [0.901; 1.0], 95% CrI).The tests were then associated with two different interpretation schemes. The series association increased the specificity of screening and could be used for pre-movement testing in rams from uninfected flocks. The parallel association increased sequence sensitivity, thus appearing more suitable for eradicating the disease in infected flocks., Conclusions: The high sensitivity and acceptable specificity of this I-ELISA kit support its potential interest to avoid the limitations of CFT. The two tests could also be used together or combined with other diagnostic methods such as semen culture to improve the testing strategy. The choice of test sequence and interpretation criteria depends on the epidemiological context, screening objectives and the financial and practical constraints.
- Published
- 2012
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