Abstract: | Five sheep were experimentally inoculated with BLV in order to study the humoral immune response in animals infected with bovine leukaemia virus (BLV). During experimental periods of 46 months, 2 sheep died with leukaemia and one sheep showed splenomegaly and proliferation of tumour cells. The other 2 sheep were clinically normal. All of the inoculated sheep developed antiviral antibodies 1 month after inoculation and BLV could be re-isolated in lymphocytes 2 to 3 months after inoculation. Antibody against glycoprotein antigen (gp51) of BLV appeared earlier than the antibody against protein antigen (p24) and antibody titres of the former were higher than those of the latter during the course of the experiment. The complement dependent antibody cytotoxicity test was performed for the detection of antibody against BLV-related cell membrane antigen with 2 different kinds of target cells; FLK cells which are foetal lamb kidney cells chronically infected with BLV and SF-28 cells which are sheep fibroblasts transformed with BLV in vitro. All 5 sheep developed cytotoxic antibodies against both types of cells. In sera from two leukaemic sheep, cytotoxic antibody titres against SF-28 cells gradually decreased 30 months after inoculation and finally became negative one to 3 months before they died of leukaemia. However, these leukaemic sheep persistently produced antibodies against gp51 and p24. |