The tick-borne diseases research programme at ILRAD

The Tick-Borne Diseases Programme at the International Laboratory for Research on Animal Disease (ILRAD) has as its own major objective the improvement of the control of tick-borne diseases by immunological means. The focus of its research has been a novel vaccine for Theileria parva, the cause of...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Dolan, T.T.
Formato: Conference Proceedings
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Laboratory for Research on Animal Diseases 1995
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2822
_version_ 1855537597822009344
author Dolan, T.T.
author_browse Dolan, T.T.
author_facet Dolan, T.T.
author_sort Dolan, T.T.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Tick-Borne Diseases Programme at the International Laboratory for Research on Animal Disease (ILRAD) has as its own major objective the improvement of the control of tick-borne diseases by immunological means. The focus of its research has been a novel vaccine for Theileria parva, the cause of East Coast fever (ECF) in 11 countries in eastern, central and southern Africa. Conventional control of tick-borne diseases in this region is by strict tick control using regular application of acaricides in dips or sprays. ILRAD's approach to the development of a new vaccine against T. parva has been through exploring the protective immune in cattle. This work has identified CD8+ T-cell responses directed against parasite antigens on the surface of infected lymphocytes as the major response. An important research objective is to complete the development of these technologies as reliable and robust diagnostic and epidemiological tools for the complex of tick-borne diseases. The long-term objective is the development of antigen-based vaccines for the major tick-borne diseases that can be designed to protect cattle in particular challenge environments. These vaccines will be applied where the tick-borne disease epidemiology has been defined so that the most appropriated control strategy is used.
format Conference Proceedings
id CGSpace2822
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1995
publishDateRange 1995
publishDateSort 1995
publisher International Laboratory for Research on Animal Diseases
publisherStr International Laboratory for Research on Animal Diseases
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace28222023-12-21T14:51:49Z The tick-borne diseases research programme at ILRAD Dolan, T.T. tickborne diseases animal diseases research disease control east coast fever vaccines immunization The Tick-Borne Diseases Programme at the International Laboratory for Research on Animal Disease (ILRAD) has as its own major objective the improvement of the control of tick-borne diseases by immunological means. The focus of its research has been a novel vaccine for Theileria parva, the cause of East Coast fever (ECF) in 11 countries in eastern, central and southern Africa. Conventional control of tick-borne diseases in this region is by strict tick control using regular application of acaricides in dips or sprays. ILRAD's approach to the development of a new vaccine against T. parva has been through exploring the protective immune in cattle. This work has identified CD8+ T-cell responses directed against parasite antigens on the surface of infected lymphocytes as the major response. An important research objective is to complete the development of these technologies as reliable and robust diagnostic and epidemiological tools for the complex of tick-borne diseases. The long-term objective is the development of antigen-based vaccines for the major tick-borne diseases that can be designed to protect cattle in particular challenge environments. These vaccines will be applied where the tick-borne disease epidemiology has been defined so that the most appropriated control strategy is used. 1995 2010-12-09T11:11:58Z 2010-12-09T11:11:58Z Conference Proceedings https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2822 en Open Access International Laboratory for Research on Animal Diseases
spellingShingle tickborne diseases
animal diseases
research
disease control
east coast fever
vaccines
immunization
Dolan, T.T.
The tick-borne diseases research programme at ILRAD
title The tick-borne diseases research programme at ILRAD
title_full The tick-borne diseases research programme at ILRAD
title_fullStr The tick-borne diseases research programme at ILRAD
title_full_unstemmed The tick-borne diseases research programme at ILRAD
title_short The tick-borne diseases research programme at ILRAD
title_sort tick borne diseases research programme at ilrad
topic tickborne diseases
animal diseases
research
disease control
east coast fever
vaccines
immunization
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2822
work_keys_str_mv AT dolantt thetickbornediseasesresearchprogrammeatilrad
AT dolantt tickbornediseasesresearchprogrammeatilrad