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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, Nov 1997, 731-735, Vol 4, No. 6
SM Chen, LC Cullman and DH Walker
In order to evaluate the relative sensitivity of the detection of
antibodies against various antigenic proteins of Ehrlichia chaffeensis for
the diagnosis of the emerging infectious disease human monocytotropic
ehrlichiosis, Western immunoblotting was performed with 27 serum samples
from convalescent patients with antibodies, as demonstrated by indirect
immunofluorescence assay. Among 22 patients with antibodies reactive with
the 120-kDa protein, 15 showed reactivity with the 29/28-kDa protein(s) and
the proteins in the 44- to 88-kDa range. Two of the serum samples with this
pattern reacted with the 29/28-kDa protein(s) of only the 91HE17 strain,
and one sample reacted with only that of the Arkansas strain, indicating
that the antibodies were stimulated by strain-specific epitopes. Overall,
antibodies to the 29/28-kDa protein(s) were detected in only 16 patients'
sera, suggesting that this protein is less sensitive than the 120-kDa
protein. Two of 12 serum samples from healthy blood donors had antibodies
reactive with the 120-kDa protein; one of these samples reacted also with
the 29/28-kDa protein(s) of Ehrlichia canis, suggesting that unrecognized
ehrlichial infection might have occurred, including human infection with E.
canis. A high correlation between reactivity with the 120-kDa protein by
Western immunoblotting and the recombinant 120-kDa protein by dot blot
supports the potential usefulness of this recombinant antigen in diagnostic
serology.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Western immunoblotting analysis of the antibody responses of patients with human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis to different strains of Ehrlichia chaffeensis and Ehrlichia canis
Department of Pathology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 77555-0609, USA.
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