1. Following an epizootic of louping ill on certain farms in south-west Ayrshire in 1960, a long-term study of several farms was initiated.2. The flocks on two hirsels of one farm were studied during spring and early summer of 1961. Although only one lamb death was confirmed as due to louping ill, the infection rates in sentinel hoggs on the two hirsels were 50–60. and 11% respectively. The difference between the hirsels is probably attributable to the difference in the amount of tick habitat on them.3. The ewes were bled in March and June and their lambs in June. Haemagglutinin inhibition (HI) and neutralization tests revealed that the HI antibody is much shorter lasting than neutralizing antibody. Many ewes, therefore, had neutralizing but not HI antibody. Otherwise agreement between the tests was good. In March almost all the ewes aged 3 years or more had antibody. Of the gimmers (2-year-olds) about two-thirds on one hirsel and one-third on the other had antibody in March: by June almost all the former and about half of the latter had antibody.4. About two-thirds of the lambs had the same antibody status as their mothers in June and almost all the rest had less antibody than their mothers. Serological evidence suggestive of louping ill without recognizable clinical disease was found in six lambs and a further lamb recovered from clinical disease.5. Revaccination of two-thirds of the flock failed to cause any detectable change in antibody status.6. The epidemiology and pathogenesis are discussed in relation to immunity and infection rates, and to the design of control measures.We are greatly indebted to the late Mr James Murdoch at Dalmellington, Mr John Murdoch at Dalcairnie Farm, and Mr David Murdoch at Knockgray Farm for permission to work on their farms and for all the help they gave us during the study.
Primary kitten kidney cultures are frequently contaminated with wild feline infectious enteritis (FIE) virus and this led the authors to develop feline embryo diploid cell lines. Monolayer cultures were prepared from the lungs or from eviscerated and decapitated carcases of embryos obtained by Caesarian section from healthy pregnant queens. At about the 30th passage, these cells lost their fibroblastic morphology to become polygonal. After a further thirty passages the monolayers exhibited foci of low cell density circumscribed by bands of cells stacked in disorganized arrangement. All the developed cell lines were susceptible to infection with FIE virus and produced intranuclear changes resembling those described by Johnson (1965) in primary kitten kidney monolayers.On four occasions the cell lines became contaminated withMycoplasmaand although there was evidence that the virus could infect the cells, there was no production of infective virus.A simple karyotype was devised in which the 38 chromosomes were arranged in three groups according to the arm-length ratio and the percentage mean index length. After the 50th passage many of the nuclei of lung-derived cultures exhibited abnormal chromosomes resulting from ring formation or translocation, whilst those of embryo culture demonstrated a new modal chromosome number of 37.We are grateful to Mrs L. Hitchcock and Mrs P. Waller, A.I.S.T., for technical assistance, to Mr E. A. Jones, A.I.I.P., for the photomicrographs and to Dr R. H. Johnson, University of Bristol, for supplying the leopard and mink enteritis viruses.
1. The susceptibility of sheep to infection with Langat virus has been studied. No viraemia or symptoms were detected in sheep inoculated either subcutaneously or intracerebrally.2. Only those sheep inoculated intracerebrally with 106·0–108·0 mouse IC LD 50 of virus developed significant quantities of neutralizing antibody.3. Two-thirds of sheep vaccinated with varying doses of Langat virus withstood subcutaneous challenge of louping-ill virus followed by intracerebral starch. All the intracerebrally vaccinated sheep survived this form of challenge but no sheep, whether vaccinated subcutaneously or intracerebrally, withstood intracerebral challenge of louping ill.4. In a field trial, three of ten hoggs vaccinated with Langat virus and exposed to natural louping ill infection at Camlarg and Dalcairnie died of the disease compared with all eight of the non-vaccinated hoggs. At Knockgray, there was no louping ill infection, but 93% of the hoggs from this hirsel developed louping ill antibody after transfer to Camlarg.5. Monkeys infected intracerebrally, subcutaneously or orally with Langat virus showed a low titre viraemia without clinical symptoms or histological changes in the brain and developed high titres of antibody. Vaccinated monkeys challenged with either Central European tick-borne encephalitis or Kyasanur Forest disease viruses remained healthy compared with control monkeys which showed evidence of disease.
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