Developing Anti-tick Vaccines

Methods Mol Biol. 2016:1404:243-259. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-3389-1_17.

Abstract

Ticks are responsible for the transmission of viral, bacterial, and protozoal diseases of man and animals and also produce significant economic losses to cattle industry. The use of acaricides constitutes a major component of integrated tick control strategies. However, this is accompanied by the selection of acaricide-resistant ticks and contamination of environment and milk and meat products with drug residues. These issues highlight the need for alternative approaches to control tick infestations and have triggered the search for tick protective antigens for vaccine development. Vaccination as a tick control method has been practiced since the introduction of TickGARD and Gavac that were developed using the midgut glycoprotein Bm86 as antigen. Gavac within integrated tick management systems has proven to reduce the number of acaricidal applications per year that are required to control some strains of R. microplus ticks in different geographical regions. Nevertheless, it has limited or no efficacy against other tick species. These issues have stimulated research for additional tick protective antigens with critical functions in the tick. This chapter presents methodologies for the design and test of molecules as antigens against ticks. Considerations about different methods for the tick control compared to the immunological methods, the desirable characteristics for an anti-tick vaccine and the obstacles encountered for developing this kind of vaccines are discussed. Detailed methodologies for the establishment of a biological model to test new molecules as immunogens against ticks and to perform challenge trials with this model are presented. General considerations in the efficacy calculation for any anti-tick vaccine are also discussed.

Keywords: Anti-tick vaccine efficacy; Experimental model; Immunization; Integrated tick control; Tick; Vaccine.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Antigens / immunology
  • Cattle
  • Female
  • Immunization
  • Male
  • Ticks / classification
  • Ticks / immunology*
  • Vaccines / immunology*

Substances

  • Antigens
  • Vaccines