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Featured researches published by Marcelo de Lima.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2004

Comparative pathogenicity of bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) subtypes 1 (BHV-1.1) and 2a (BHV-1.2a)

Fernando Rosado Spilki; Paulo Augusto Esteves; Marcelo de Lima; Ana Cláudia Franco; Cláudio Chiminazzo; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Rudi Weiblen; David Driemeier; Paulo Michel Roehe

The study aimed to examine the capacity of two bovine herpesvirus type 1 (BHV-1) isolates of different subtypes (EVI 123/96, BHV-1.1; SV265/98, BHV-1.2a) to induce respiratory disease in calves. These two isolates are representative of the BHV-1 subtypes prevalent in Brazil. Viral subtypes were confirmed by monoclonal antibody analysis and by restriction enzyme digestion of viral genomes. The viruses were inoculated intranasally into seven 3 months old calves (four with BHV-1.1, three with BHV-1.2a). Three other calves of identical age and condition were kept as uninfected controls. In both groups of infected calves, the clinical signs observed were consistent with typical infectious bovine rhinothracheitis (IBR), including pyrexia, apathy, anorexia, nasal and ocular mucopurulent discharges, erosions on the nasal mucosa, conjunctivitis, lachrymation, redness of nasal mucosa, dyspnoea, coughing, tracheal stridor and enlargement of retropharingeal, submandibular and cervical lymphnodes. No significant differences were observed between the clinical scores attributed to both groups. Virus shedding in nasal and ocular secretions were also similar, apart from a significant difference in nasal virus shedding on day 1 to 3 post-inoculation, which was higher for BHV-1.1 than for BHV-1.2a. Following corticosteroid induced reactivation of the latent infection, recrudescence of clinical signs was also observed, with no significant differences on both groups. It was concluded that both subtypes BHV-1.1 and BHV-1.2a were able to induce clinically undistinguishable respiratory disease in calves, either subsequent to a primary infection or following reactivation.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2002

A Brazilian glycoprotein E-negative bovine herpesvirus type 1.2a (BHV-1.2a) mutant is attenuated for cattle and induces protection against wild-type virus challenge

Ana Cláudia Franco; Fernando Rosado Spilki; Paulo Augusto Esteves; Marcelo de Lima; Rudi Weiblen; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Franciscus Antonius Maria Rijsewijk; Paulo Michel Roehe

The authors previously reported the construction of a glycoprotein E-deleted (gE-) mutant of bovine herpesvirus type 1.2a (BHV-1.2a). This mutant, 265gE-, was designed as a vaccinal strain for differential vaccines, allowing the distinction between vaccinated and naturally infected cattle. In order to determine the safety and efficacy of this candidate vaccine virus, a group of calves was inoculated with 265gE-. The virus was detected in secretions of inoculated calves to lower titres and for a shorter period than the parental virus inoculated in control calves. Twenty one days after inoculation, the calves were challenged with the wild type parental virus. Only mild signs of infection were detected on vaccinated calves, whereas non-vaccinated controls displayed intense rhinotracheitis and shed virus for longer and to higher titres than vaccinated calves. Six months after vaccination, both vaccinated and control groups were subjected to reactivation of potentially latent virus. The mutant 265gE- could not be reactivated from vaccinated calves. The clinical signs observed, following the reactivation of the parental virus, were again much milder on vaccinated than on non-vaccinated calves. Moreover, parental virus shedding was considerably reduced on vaccinated calves at reactivation. In view of its attenuation, immunogenicity and protective effect upon challenge and reactivation with a virulent BHV-1, the mutant 265gE- was shown to be suitable for use as a BHV-1 differential vaccine virus.


Ciencia Rural | 2004

Replicação e excreção viral durante a infecção aguda e após a reativação da latência induzida por dexametasona em bezerros inoculados com os herpesvírus bovinos tipo 1 (BHV-1) e 5 (BHV-5)

Fernanda Silveira Flores Vogel; Marcelo de Lima; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Rudi Weiblen; Evandro Reinoldo Winkelmann; Sandra Vanderli Mayer; Ketty Cristina Mazzutti; Sandra Arenhart

The efficiency of the establishment and reactivation of latent infection by bovine herpesviruses types 1 and 5 (BHV-1 and 5) was compared. Calves inoculated intranasally with BHV-1 (SV-265, n=6) or BHV-5 (SV-507, n=6) presented a mild to moderate nasal discharge and shed virus in nasal secretions in titers up to 107.81TCID50/ml (mean tissue culture infectious dose) during an average of 10.5 days (6-15 [BHV-1]) or up to 106.7 TCID50/ml during 15.3 days (13-18 [BHV-5]). Dexamethasone administration (Dx; 0.5mg/kg) at day 60pi resulted in reactivation of the infection in all calves. Virus shedding in nasal secretions was detected in titers up to 105.5TCID50/ml during 6 to 9 days (mean: 7.8) in calves inoculated with BHV-1 and in titers up to 106.1TCID50/ml (3 to 12 days, mean: 7.5) in calves inoculated with BHV-5. These results showed that BHV-1 and BHV-5 were capable of establishing and reactivating the latent infection at comparable levels.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2000

Production and characterization of monoclonal antibodies to Brazilian isolates of bovine viral diarrhea virus

L.C. Kreutz; R. Donis; Laura H.V.G. Gil; Marcelo de Lima; A.N. Hoffman; D.C. Garcez; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Rudi Weiblen

Three Brazilian isolates of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV), antigenically distinct from the standard North American isolates, were selected to immunize BALB/c mice in order to obtain hybridoma cells secreting anti-BVDV monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Two hybridoma clones secreting mAbs, reacting specifically with BVDV-infected cells (mAbs 3.1C4 and 6.F11), were selected after five fusions and screening of 1001 hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine-resistant clones. These mAbs reacted in an indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) assay with all 39 South and North American BVDV field isolates and reference strains available in our laboratory, yet failed to recognize other pestiviruses, namely the hog cholera virus. The mAbs reacted at dilutions up to 1:25,600 (ascitic fluid) and 1:100 (hybridoma culture supernatant) in IFA and immunoperoxidase (IPX) staining of BVDV-infected cells but only mAb 3.1C4 neutralized virus infectivity. Furthermore, both mAbs failed to recognize BVDV proteins by IPX in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues and following SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analysis of virus-infected cells, suggesting they are probably directed to conformational-type epitopes. The protein specificity of these mAbs was then determined by IFA staining of CV-1 cells transiently expressing each of the BVDV proteins: mAb 3. 1C4 reacted with the structural protein E2/gp53 and mAb 6.F11 reacted with the structural protein E1/gp25. Both mAbs were shown to be of the IgG2a isotype. To our knowledge, these are the first mAbs produced against South American BVDV isolates and will certainly be useful for research and diagnostic purposes.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2002

Neurovirulência e neuroinvasividade de herpesvírus bovinos tipos 1 e 5 em coelhos

Fernando Rosado Spilki; Paulo Augusto Esteves; Ana Cláudia Franco; Marcelo de Lima; Carine Lidiane Holz; Helena Beatriz de Carvalho Ruthner Batista; David Driemeier; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Rudi Weiblen; Paulo Michel Roehe

In order to determine the capacity of bovine herpesvirus type 1 and 5 (BHV-1 and BHV-5) to invade, multiply and spread along the central nervous system (CNS) (neuroinvasiveness), as well as their potential to induce neurological illness (neurovirulence), 30 to 35 days old rabbits were inoculated with the BHV-5 strain EVI 88 / 95 and Los Angeles and Cooper BHV-1 strains, by the intrathecal (IT) and intranasal (IN) routes. The BHV-5 strain induced severe neurological clinical signs in 100% (12/12) of the rabbits inoculated by both routes. Histopathological examination revealed multifocal non-suppurative meningoencephalitis, characterized by multifocal gliosis and perivascular cuffing. Virus was recovered from many parts of the brain. Both BHV-1 strains, when inoculated via IT route, were not neurovirulent. The strain Los Angeles, after IN inoculation, induced signs of severe respiratory disease (7/7), as well as signs of neurological impairment, indistinguishable from those induced by BHV-5, in 57% (4/7) of the infected rabbits. However, the rabbits with nervous signs revealed at histopathology vasculitis and thrombosis in lungs and brain, the latter with foci of neuronal necrosis, but no lesions indicative of encephalitis, suggesting that neural damage was probably consequent to tissue anoxia. The BHV-1 strain Cooper, after IN inoculation, induced only mild signs of respiratory disease. These findings indicate that the BHV-5 strain was both neuroinvasive and neurovirulent, since it was capable of invading, spreading and multiplying in the rabbits brains by both routes of inoculation, yet causing neurological disease, apparently consequent to virus induced neural damage. The BHV-1 Los Angeles strain was not neuroinvasive, whereas its neurovirulence was probably consequent to tissue anoxia, which histologically seemed not to be related to direct viral pathogenic effect. The BHV-1 strain Cooper was neither neurovirulent nor neuroinvasive for rabbits. It is possible that these observations bear relationship with the frequent association of BHV-5 with encephalitis in cattle, as opposed to BHV-1 encephalitis, which is a rare event in nature.


Ciencia Rural | 2001

Resposta sorológica e avaliação de proteção fetal em ovelhas prenhes vacinadas contra o vírus da diarréia viral bovina (BVDV)

Fernanda Silveira Flores Vogel; Charles Fernando Capinos Scherer; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Rudi Weiblen; Marcelo de Lima; Cíntia Farias Kunrath

Medico Veterinario, MSc, PhD, Professor Adjunto, Departamento de Medicina Veterinaria Preventiva, Centro de Ciencias Rurais e De-partamento de Microbiologia e Parasitologia, UFSM. Bolsista do CNPq (520758/96-0). DMVP, CCR, UFSM, 97105-900, Santa Maria,RS. Fone/fax: 55-220-8034. E mail: [email protected]. Autor para correspondencia.


Ciencia Rural | 2005

Anticorpos neutralizantes contra o vírus da Diarréia Viral Bovina (BVDV): comparação entre um imunógeno experimental atenuado e três vacinas comerciais inativadas

Marcelo de Lima; Fernanda Silveira Flores Vogel; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Rudi Weiblen

The titers and duration of neutralizing antibodies against bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) induced by an experimental attenuated vaccine (vaccine A: one dose) were compared to those induced by three commercial inactivated ones (B, C and D: two doses at a 30 day interval). Thirty days after vaccination (vaccine A) or the second dose (vaccines B, C and D), neutralizing antibodies to BVDV-1 were detected in all calves (12/12) from group A (mean geometric titer GMT=1612.7); in 32 out of 36 from group B (GMT=14.3); 22/28 from group C (GMT=25.1); 16/30 from group D (GMT=40.0). Antibodies reacting with BVDV-2 were detected in all animals from group A (GMT=151.0); 27/36 from group B (GMT=10.0); 12/28 from group C (GMT=11.5) and in 10 out of 30 animals of group D (GMT=10.0). At day 180 post-vaccination, the number of animals reacting to BVDV-1 and the GMTs were: vaccine A (12/12, GMT=905.0); vaccine B (30/36, GMT=28.3); vaccine C (20/28, GMT=28.3); vaccine D (14/30, GMT=16.1); and against BVDV-2: vaccine A (12/12, GMT=56.6); vaccine B (18/36, GMT=16.8); vaccine C (10/28, GMT=21.6) and vaccine D (6/30, GMT=16.1). The geometric mean titers (GMTs) induced by vaccine A were significantly higher than those induced by the other vaccines (BVDV-1: P<0.0001) and (BVDV-2: P=0.01) in all days of testing. Cross-neutralization tests revealed that the antibodies induced by vaccine A cross-reacted to higher titers also with three Brazilian BVDV-1 and one BVDV-2 isolates. These results demonstrate that the experimental attenuated vaccine induced neutralizing antibodies in higher titers, duration and spectrum of reactivity than those induced by commercial vaccines. This vaccine may represent a future alternative for the control of BVDV infection in Brazil.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2002

Técnica rápida de neutralização viral para a detecção de anticorpos contra o vírus da Diarréia Viral Bovina (BVDV) no leite

Charles Fernando Capinos Scherer; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Rudi Weiblen; Luiz Carlos Kreutz; João Walter Dürr; Larissa Picada Brum; Valter Leonardo de Quadros; Marcelo de Lima

The identification of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) positive herds through detection of antibodies in milk may viabilize large scale control/eradication programs. With this objective, the virus neutralization test (VN) was adapted to detect BVDV antibodies in milk. The adaptation consisted of a reduction in the time of incubation followed by detection of viral antigens in the indicator cells by immunofluorescence (IFA) and allowed readings at 24 hours. The rapid virus neutralization test (RVN) was initially tested in 1,335 serum samples, showing a 93.7% sensitivity and 91.1% agreement with the traditional VN. The RVN was also used to test 423 bovine sera that were toxic for cell culture in the traditional VN test, detecting 316 (74.7%) positive samples. Testing of matched serum and milk samples from BVDV seropositive cows showed that the VNR can detect antibodies in the milk of cows with serum neutralizing titers as low as 10. Anti-BVDV neutralizing activity was detected in milk of 97.4% (191/196) of cows with serum titers ³320; in 92.9% (79/85) of cows with titers of 160; in 88% (59/67) of cows with serum titers of 80. The frequency of BVDV antibodies in milk was 76.9% (40/52) for cows with serum titers of 40; 61.3% (19/31) for cows with titers of 20 and 33.3% (10/30) for cows with serum titers of 20. These results demonstrate that the RVN test is adequate for detecting BVDV antibodies in milk, mainly in cows having moderate to high serum titers, and therefore may be used for testing bulk milk samples to identify herds with viral activity. The use of this test may viabilize large scale programs for control/eradication of BVDV infection. It allows to assay a large number of samples and identify positive herds through testing milk routinely submitted for somatic cell counts (SCC), reducing costs with individual sample collection, shipping and testing.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2004

Caracterização de amostras atenuadas do vírus da Diarréia Viral Bovina (BVDV) tipos 1 e 2 para uso em vacinas

Marcelo de Lima; Eduardo Furtado Flores; Rudi Weiblen; Fernanda Silveira Flores Vogel; Sandra Arenhart

This article reports the characterization of two cytopathic isolates of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV-1: IBSP-2; BVDV-2:SV-253) submitted to multiple passages (n=30) in tissue culture associated with ultraviolet irradiation. The vaccine candidate strains were characterized in vitro (plaque size and morphology, growth kinetics and antigenic profile) and in vivo (attenuation and serological response in calves). In vitro characterization of biologically cloned viruses obtained at passages 0, 1, 10, 20 and 30 demonstrated that the attenuation process did not significantly affect the phenotypic and antigenic properties of the viruses. No major differences in plaque size and morphology and in the growth kinetics in tissue culture were observed among the viruses obtained at different passages. Likewise, the antigenic profile of these viruses did not change upon successive passages in tissue culture, as ascertained by the pattern of binding by 48 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Intramuscular inoculation of both viruses (IBSP-2: 107.3 TCID50; SV-253: 106.8 TCID50) at passage 30 (p30) in twelve 15 months old heifers did not produce clinical signs, demonstrating the attenuation of the viruses. Following inoculation, infectious virus was detected in leucocytes of most inoculated animals (10/12) between days 3 and 6 post-inoculation (pi) and in nasal secretions of three animals (days 4, 7 and 8pi). However, the vaccine viruses were not transmitted to three seronegative calves maintained as sentinels. All vaccinated calves seroconverted at day 14 post-vaccination. A moderate to high serum neutralizing response against five Brazilian BVDV-1 (titers from 80 to > 1,280) and four Brazilian BVDV-2 isolates (titers from 20 to 640) was observed at day 33 post-vaccination (pv). In general, the highest titers were observed against the Brazilian BVDV-1 isolates. At day 240 post-vaccination, the animals received a booster administration (IBSP-2: 107.3 TCID50 and SV-253: 106.8 TCID50). Revaccination resulted in a strong anamnestic response in most animals, with increasing antibody titers mainly to BVDV-2. These are promising results towards the future use of these strains in modified-live vaccines for the control of BVDV infection in Brazil .


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2003

Aborto por Aspergillus fumigatus e A. niger em bovinos no sul do Brasil

Luis Gustavo Corbellini; Caroline Argenta Pescador; Fernanda Junges Frantz; Marcelo de Lima; Laerte Ferreiro; David Driemeier

Mycotic infection has worldwide distribution and may cause placentitis and abortion in almost all domestic animals. From September 2001 through November 2002 specimens from 147 aborted bovine fetuses along with 34 placentas were submitted to the Laboratory of Veterinary Pathology, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, to investigate infectious causes of abortion in southern Brazil. Mycotic abortion was diagnosed in five cases (3.4%). Aspergillus fumigatus was isolated from four cases and A. niger from one. Virological, bacteriological and direct immunofluorescent antibody tests for Leptospira sp were negative in those cases where Aspergillus sp was cultured. The gestational age of those fetuses ranged from 5 to 8 months. Macroscopic lesions were observed in four cases. One had several nodular lesions disseminated throughout the liver, two had skin lesions characterized by white-grayish round plaques mostly on the head and neck, and thickened cotyledons in two placentas sent with those fetuses. The histological lesions were observed in the liver, lungs and placenta and consisted primary of necrotizing hepatitis, suppurative bronchopneumonia of varying degrees and necrotizing placentitis. With the use of Grocotts methenamine-silver staining, septate hyphae could be observed in three cases, surrounding necrotizing lesions in the liver of one fetus and in two placentas. In two cases hyphae were observed in placental tissues and not in fetal tissues, indicating the importance of the placenta in diagnosing mycotic abortion in cattle.

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Rudi Weiblen

National Council for Scientific and Technological Development

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Eduardo Furtado Flores

National Council for Scientific and Technological Development

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David Driemeier

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Ana Cláudia Franco

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Fernanda Silveira Flores Vogel

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Paulo Augusto Esteves

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Paulo Michel Roehe

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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João Walter Dürr

Universidade de Passo Fundo

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