AUTHOR=Glidden Caroline K. , Beechler Brianna , Buss Peter Erik , Charleston Bryan , de Klerk-Lorist Lin-Mari , Maree Francois Frederick , Muller Timothy , Pérez-Martin Eva , Scott Katherine Anne , van Schalkwyk Ockert Louis , Jolles Anna TITLE=Detection of Pathogen Exposure in African Buffalo Using Non-Specific Markers of Inflammation JOURNAL=Frontiers in Immunology VOLUME=8 YEAR=2018 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2017.01944 DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2017.01944 ISSN=1664-3224 ABSTRACT=
Detecting exposure to new or emerging pathogens is a critical challenge to protecting human, domestic animal, and wildlife health. Yet, current techniques to detect infections typically target known pathogens of humans or economically important animals. In the face of the current surge in infectious disease emergence, non-specific disease surveillance tools are urgently needed. Tracking common host immune responses indicative of recent infection may have potential as a non-specific diagnostic approach for disease surveillance. The challenge to immunologists is to identify the most promising markers, which ideally should be highly conserved across pathogens and host species, become upregulated rapidly and consistently in response to pathogen invasion, and remain elevated beyond clearance of infection. This study combined an infection experiment and a longitudinal observational study to evaluate the utility of non-specific markers of inflammation [NSMI; two acute phase proteins (haptoglobin and serum amyloid A), two pro-inflammatory cytokines (IFNγ and TNF-α)] as indicators of pathogen exposure in a wild mammalian species, African buffalo (