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Title: Safety of a temperature-sensitive clone of Mycoplasma synoviae as a live vaccine. Author: Markham JF, Morrow CJ, Scott PC, Whithear KG. Journal: Avian Dis; 1998; 42(4):677-81. PubMed ID: 9876835. Abstract: A temperature-sensitive (ts+) clone derived from the Australian Mycoplasma synoviae (MS) field isolate 86079/7NS was produced by chemical mutagenesis with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine and assessed for safety as a live vaccine. This clone, designated MS-H, was assessed for pathogenicity in three different models with air sac lesions as the criterion. No air sac lesions were observed when MS-H was administered to specific-pathogen-free hybrid white leghorn (HWL) chickens by eyedrop at 10 times the normal dose or directly into the thoracic air sacs or as an aerosol administered to specific-pathogen-free Webster white leghorn chickens with concurrent intratracheal T-strain infectious bronchitis virus (IBV). MS-H did not revert to virulence or lose the ts+ phenotype when passaged through five in vivo and 10 in vitro passages. No adverse effects were seen when HWL chickens were vaccinated concurrently with MS-H and combinations of Mycoplasma gallisepticum ts-11 vaccine, IBV vaccine, and infectious laryngotracheitis virus vaccine. Lateral transmission of MS-H was found to occur when vaccinated HWL chickens were mixed with unvaccinated chickens 2 wk after vaccination. At 1 wk after mixing, one out of two unvaccinated chickens had seroconverted to MS and was culture positive for MS. At 2 wk after mixing, both contact chickens were positive for MS by culture and serology.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]