
Readdetailed story in Agricultural Research magazine. Johnes Disease Tool
Now PatentedBy Linda McGraw December 21, 1999A diagnostic tool for identifying
dairy cattle in the early stages of a costly disease has been patented by
Agricultural Research Service scientists
in Ames, Iowa. An article in the December millennium issue of Agricultural Research magazine
highlights this and other ARS advances in animal research. The new test detects Johnes disease, which costs U.S. dairy producers
more than $200 million annually. The newly patented gene probe is based on a
genetic sequence discovered by ARS researchers. The probe can pinpoint
Mycobacterium paratuberculosis--the organism that causes Johnes
disease in dairy cattle--in blood, tissue and fecal samples. Using this genetic sequence and another previously discovered genetic
sequence for M. paratuberculosis in a DNA-based test allows
diagnosticians to accurately identify animals infected with the organism even
in the early stages of infection. Current tests can detect the presence of an
antibody, but it takes years before an infected animals immune system
produces antibodies to M. paratuberculosis. Early diagnosis is critical to eliminating the disease because the primary
control method is removing infected animals from the herd. Infected animals
often dont show signs of disease, but they can still pass the organism to
healthy animals. Johnes is spread within and among dairy herds in three
ways: by an infected cow passing the organism to an unborn fetus, by calves
coming into contact with bacteria-laden manure, and by calves nursing an
infected cow. The patent was issued to ARS microbiologist Judith H. Stabel at ARS
National Animal Disease Center in
Ames and to Jay L.E. Ellingson, formerly with ARS. Other accomplishments cited
in the article include: - Advances in gene marker selection by scientists at ARS
Meat Animal Research Center in Clay
Center, Nebraska. These advances will help researchers select genes that impart
disease resistance as well as quality characteristics, such as size,
reproductive capability or leanness.
- A way to predict which Holstein bulls will sire daughters more susceptible
to mastitis, a bacterial infection that costs U.S. dairy producers more than $2
billion annually
- An automated chicken inspection system developed by a Beltsville, Md.,
researcher. The computerized system scans up to 140 birds a minute, alerting a
human inspector with a red light to indicate that a particular bird warrants
closer inspection. The payoff for this research: safer poultry products, with
less Salmonella and Campylobacter.
- An oral vaccine for shipping fever developed by ARS scientists in Ames,
Iowa. Commercialization of this vaccine is still about 3 years away, but it
will help U.S. cattle producers cut losses that add up to more than $1 billion
annually.
ARS is USDAs chief research arm. A more detailed story on this
research appears in Agricultural Research magazine. To read the story
online click
here. Scientific contact on Johnes disease: Judith H. Stabel, ARS
Zoonotic Diseases Research,
National Animal Disease Center, P.O. Box 70, Ames, IA, 50010, phone (515)
663-7304, fax (515) 663-7458, [email protected]. To
contact other scientists whose work appears here, contact Linda McGraw, ARS
Information Staff, Peoria, Ill., phone (309) 681-6530,
[email protected]. U.S. Department of Agriculture | |