Bovine and human endothelial cell growth on collagen microspheres and their infection with the rickettsia Cowdria ruminantium : prospects for cells and vaccine production

Authors

    P. Totté, D. Blankaert, T. Marique, C. Kirkpatrick, J.P. Van Vooren, J. Wérenne

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19182/remvt.9351

Keywords


Cattle, Bacterioses, Cell culture, cells, Collagen, Vaccines

Abstract

We successfully cultivated the rickesttsia Cowdria ruminantium, in bovine endothelial cell lines (Bovine Umbilical Endothelial Cells/BUEC and Bovine microvasculature Cells/BMC) and also in primary endothelial cells of bovine origin (Bovine Aorta Endothelial cells/BAEC) and more surprisingly in cells of human origin – Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells/HUVEC - and Human Endothelial Cells from the Microvasculature/HEMEC. This first evidence of the pathogenicity of this bovine rickettsia in the human cell system generates new interest as regards its possible relevance for human health. It provides also further possibilities for the attenuation of Cowdria ruminantium isolates, and therefore brings new prospects for vaccine preparation. In vaccine production, mass cell culture is essential. Our results indicate that endothelial cells attach efficiently on collagen microspheres. As BAEC cells grow well on them in a batch mode, and if the process could be optimized for the different cell types (using appropriate adhesion and growth factors) our observations offer interesting prospects for the future development of a Cowdria ruminantium vaccine production in the fluidized-bed reactor VERAX System one, which provides easy control of growth conditions.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Affiliations

  • P. Totté
  • D. Blankaert
  • T. Marique
  • C. Kirkpatrick
  • J.P. Van Vooren
  • J. Wérenne

Downloads

Metrics
Views/Downloads
  • Abstract
    250
  • PDF
    143

Published

1993-01-01

How to Cite

Totté, P., Blankaert, D., Marique, T., Kirkpatrick, C., Van Vooren, J., & Wérenne, J. (1993). Bovine and human endothelial cell growth on collagen microspheres and their infection with the rickettsia Cowdria ruminantium : prospects for cells and vaccine production. Revue d’élevage Et De médecine vétérinaire Des Pays Tropicaux, 46(1-2), 153–156. https://doi.org/10.19182/remvt.9351

Issue

Section

Other