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Iowa State University

Veterinary Preventive Medicine, Epidemiology, and Public Health

Complement-resistance assays

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Complement Resistance, As Determined By Viable Count And Flow Cytometric Methods, And Its Association With The Presence Of Iss And The Virulence Of Avian Escherichia Coli, Lisa K. Nolan, Catherine W. Giddings, Shelley M. Horne, Curt Doetkott, Penelope S. Gibbs, Richard E. Wooley, Steven L. Foley Apr 2002

Complement Resistance, As Determined By Viable Count And Flow Cytometric Methods, And Its Association With The Presence Of Iss And The Virulence Of Avian Escherichia Coli, Lisa K. Nolan, Catherine W. Giddings, Shelley M. Horne, Curt Doetkott, Penelope S. Gibbs, Richard E. Wooley, Steven L. Foley

Lisa K. Nolan

Previous work in our labs has shown that avian Escherichia coli virulence is correlated with resistance to complement. Also, our studies have revealed that the presence of the increased serum survival gene (iss), known to contribute to the complement resistance and virulence of mammalian E. coli, may predict the virulent nature of an avian E. coli isolate. This relationship warrants further research, but further clarification of the relationship among virulence, complement resistance, and iss sequences requires use of complement susceptibility assays. Such assays, unfortunately, are labor-intensive, expensive, and difficult to perform. In the present study, the results of two complement …