Contents of veterinary microbiology, volume 24

Contents of veterinary microbiology, volume 24

429 Contents of VeterinaryMicrobiology, Volume 24 JULY V O L . 24 N O . 1 Antibodies to Aujeszky's disease virus in pigs immunized with purified v...

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429

Contents of

VeterinaryMicrobiology, Volume 24 JULY

V O L . 24 N O . 1

Antibodies to Aujeszky's disease virus in pigs immunized with purified virus glycoproteins G. Iglesias, T. Molitor (St. Paul, MN, U.S.A.), D. Reed and J. L'Italien (Minnetonka, MN, U.S.A.) ....................................................................................................................................... Characterisation of Chlamydia psittaci isolated from a horse J.M. Wills, G. Watson, M. Lusher (Manchester, Great Britain), T.S. Mair (Bristol, Great Britain ), D. Wood and S.J. Richmond (Manchester, Great Britain) ....................................... Efficacy against ovine enzootic abortion of an experimental vaccine containing purified elementary bodies of Chlamydia psittaci I.E. Anderson, T.W. Tan, G.E. Jones and A.J. Herring (Edinburgh, Great Britain) ................ Biochemical and immunochemical characterisation of strains of Treponema hyodysenteriae S.C. Smith, F. Roddick, S. Ling (Melbourne, Vic., Australia), N.L. Gerraty (Noble Park, Vic., Australia) and P.J. Coloe (Melbourne, Vic., Australia) ................................................... Factors influencing the degree of in vitro bacterial adhesion to ovine mammary gland epithelial cells B. Amorena, R. Baselga and B. Aguilar (Zaragoza, Spain) ....................................................... Bactericidal activity in the sera of mice vaccinated with Pasteurella multocida type A T.G. Wijewardana and A.D. Sutherland (Edinburgh, Great Britain) ...................................... Susceptibility of Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) to leptospires and the protective effect of vaccination M. Yukawa, K. Mochizuki (Fujisawa, Japan ) and S. Imamura (Tokyo, Japan ) ..................... Diagnosis of bovine brucellosis by enzyme immunoassay of milk P. Kerkhofs (Brussels, Belgium), Y. Botton, P. Thiange (Erpent, Belgium), P. Dekeyser and J.N. Limet (Brussels, Belgium) .......................................................................................... The influence of growth conditions of Pasteurella multocida on its ability to colonise the nasal mucosa of SPF piglets B. l~ligts, M. Herpay, M. Albert (Budapest, Hungary), J. Fekete (Szeged, Hungary), S. Tuboly, P. Rafai and E. Moln~ir (Budapest, Hungary) ............................................................. Characteristics of the Shiga-like toxin produced by Escherichia coli associated with porcine edema disease V.P.J. Gannon and C.L. Gyles (Guelph, Ont., Canada) ...........................................................

Book Reviews Orthopox viruses ............................................................................................................................. Rabies .............................................................................................................................................. VOL. 24 NO. 2

AUGUST

1990

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Expression of fowl adenovirus type 10 antigens in Escherichia coil M. Sheppard and W. Werner (Parkville, Vic., Australia) .......................................................... Isolation and restriction endonuclease analysis of a tetracycline resistance plasmid from

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Staphylococcus hyicus St. Schwarz and H. Blobel (Giessen, Federal Republic of Germany) ........................................ Slide precipitation: a simple method to type Actinobacillus (Haernophilus) pleuropneurnoniae

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430 J. Hommez (Torhout, Belgium ), L.A. Devriese (Ghent, Belgium ), F. Castryck and P. Cassimon (Torhout, Belgium) ................................................................................................... Detection of Eperythrozoon suis DNA from swine blood by whole organisms DNA hybridizations R.D. Oberst, S.M. Hall and D.A. Schoneweis (Manhattan, KS, U.S.A. ) .................................. The growth response ofMycoplasma hyopneumoniae and Mycoplasmaflocculare based upon ATP-dependent luminometry G.W. Stemke and J.A. Robertson (Edmonton, Alta., Canada) ................................................. The humoral immune response of lambs experimentally infected with Mycoplasma

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ovipneumoniae D. Thirkell, R.K. Spooner (St. Andrews, Great Britain), G.E. Jones (Edinburgh, Great Britain) and W.C. Russell (St. Andrews, Great Britain) ........................................................... The humoral immune response of chickens to Mycoplasma gallisepticum and Mycoplasma synoviae studied by immunoblotting A.P. Avakian and S.H. Kleven (Athens, GA, U.S.A. ) ................................................................ A complex-trapping-blocking (CTB) ELISA, using monoclonal antibodies and detecting specifically antibodies directed against foot-and-mouth disease types A, O and C. I. Method and characteristics C. van Maanen (Lelystad, The Netherlands) ............................................................................. A complex-trapping-blocking (CTB) ELISA, using monoclonal antibodies and detecting specifically antibodies directed against foot-and-mouth disease types A,O. and C. I1. Application C. van Maanen (Lelystad, The Netherlands) ............................................................................. A complement-dependent neutralizing monoclonal antibody against glycoprotein II of pseudorabies virus T. Nakamura, T. Ihara, T. Nagata (Tokyo, Japan ), A. Ishihama (Shizuoka, Japan ) and S. Ueda (Tokyo, Japan ) ..................................................................................................................

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Short Communications A spiral microorganism in the stomach of pigs D.M.M. Queiroz, G.A. Rocha, E.N. Mendes, A.P. Lage, A.C.T. Carvalho and A.J.A. Barbosa (Belo Horizonte, Brazil) ............................................................................................... The development and evaluation of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the detection of Alvcobacterium boris B.J. Duffield (Townsville, Qld., Australia) ................................................................................

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Book Review Diagnostic virology ...........................................................................................................................

VOL. 24 N O S . 3 - 4

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S E P T E M B E R 1990

Preface P.S. Paul (Ames, IA, U.S.A.) ..................................................................................................... The magic and challenge of DNA probes as diagnostic reagents D. Gillespie (Philadelphia, PA, U.S.A. ) .................................................................................... Methodologies for in vitro nucleic acid amplification and their applications T.R. Gingeras (La Jolla, CA, U.S.A. ), D.D. Richman (San Diego, CA, U.S.A. ), D.Y. Kwoh (La Jolla, CA, U.S.A. ) and J.C. Guatelli (San Diego, CA, U.S.A. ) ............................... Development and characterization of nucleic acid probes to infectious bursal disease viruses D.J. Jackwood (Wooster, OH, U.S.A.) ..................................................................................... Detection of avian infectious bronchitis viral infection using in situ hybridization and recombinant DNA E.W. Collisson, J. Li, L.W. Sneed, M.L. Peters and L. Wang (College Station, TX, U.S.A. ) ...

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431 Detection of latent pseudorabies virus in swine using in situ hybridization T.M. Brown, F.A. Osorio and D.L Rock (Lincoln, NE, U.S.A.) .............................................. Polymerase chain reaction amplification of pseudorabies virus DNA from acutely and latently infected cells R.K. Maes, C.E. Beisel, S.J. Spatz and B.J. Thacker (East Lansing, MI, U.S.A. ) .................... Detection of bovine viral diarrhea virus in serum from cattle by dot blot hybridization assay K.V. Brock (Wooster, OH, U.S.A.) and L.N.D. Potgieter (Knoxville, TN, U.S.A.) ............... Development of specific nucleic acid probes for the differentiation of porcine rotavirus serotypes M.E. Johnson, P.S. Paul (Ames, IA, U.S.A.), M. Gorziglia (Bethesda, MD, U.S.A.) and R. Rosenbusch (Ames, IA, U.S.A.) ........................................................................................... Hybridization probes for the detection and differentiation of two serotypes of porcine rotavirus B.I. Rosen, L.J. Sail D.J. Jackwood (Wooster, OH, U.S.A. ) and M. Gorziglia (Bethesda, MD, U.S.A. ) ............................................................................................................................... Characterization ofListeria rnonocytogenes isolates by Southern blot hybridization I.V. Wesley, R.D. Wesley (Ames, IA, U.S.A. ), J. Heisick, F. Harrell and D. Wagner (Minneapolis, MN, U.S.A.) ...................................................................................................... Nucleic acid probe characterizes Leptospira interrogans serovars by restriction fragment length polymorphisms R.L. Zuerner and C.A. Bolin (Ames, IA, U.S.A.) ..................................................................... Species-specific DNA probes for Carnpylobacter species isolated from pigs with proliferative enteritis C.J. Gebhart, M.P. Murtaugh, G.-F. Lin and G.E. Ward (St. Paul, MN, U.S.A.) .................... Comparison of a DNA probe, complement-fixation and indirect immunofluorescence test for diagnosing A naplasma marginale in suspected carrier cattle W.L. Goff (Pullman, WA, U.S.A. ), D. Stiller, R.A. Roeder, L.W. Johnson, D. Falk (Moscow, ID, U.S.A. ), J.R. Gotham and T.C. McGuire (Pullman, WA, U.S.A. ) .................. Development of a recombinant A naplasrna marginale DNA probe R. Aboytes-Torres and G.M. Buening (Columbia, MO, U.S.A. ) .............................................. Applications of nucleic acid probes in veterinary infectious diseases P.S. Paul (Ames, IA, U.S.A. ) .....................................................................................................

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A u t h o r I n d e x .................................................................................................................................... 4 1 9 Subject I n d e x .................................................................................................................................... 4 2 4 C o n t e n t s of

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