20 research outputs found

    Differential attenuation of Marek's disease virus-induced tumours and late-Marek's disease virus-induced immunosuppression

    Get PDF
    Marek's disease virus (MDV) is a herpesvirus that induces lymphoma and a variety of non-neoplastic syndromes in chickens. Furthermore, very virulent plus (vv+) MDVs induce a form of immunosuppression (late-MDV-IS) that might involve both neoplastic and non-neoplastic mechanisms. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether the attenuation of MDV-induced tumours and late-MDV-IS occurs simultaneously or can be dissociated. The immunosuppressive ability of three viruses derived from vv+ MDV strain 686 (wild-type 686, the somewhat attenuated molecular clone 686-BAC, and the nononcogenic molecular clone lacking the two copies of the oncogene meq 686-BACΔMEQ) was evaluated. Late-MDV-IS was evaluated indirectly by assessing the negative effect of MDV strains on the protection conferred by infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) vaccines. Our results showed that the ability to induce late-MDV-IS was attenuated before the ability to induce tumours. Strain 686 induced both tumours and late-MDV-IS, 686-BAC induced tumours but did not induce late-MDV-IS and 686-BACΔMEQ did not induce either tumours or late-MDV-IS. Further comparison of strains 686 and 686-BAC revealed that strain 686 reduced the humoral immune responses to ILTV (1132 vs 2167) more severely, showed higher levels of meq transcripts (2.1E+09 vs 4.98E+8) and higher expression of MDV microRNAs (mdv1-miR-M4-5p and mdv1-miR-M2-3p) in the spleen, and further reduced the percentage of CD45+-MHC-I+splenocytes (13 vs32 %) compared to molecular clone 686-BAC. This study suggests that the immunosuppressive ability of MDV might follow a continuous spectrum and only the most virulent MDVs can overcome a certain threshold level and induce clinical MDV-IS in the ILT model

    Evaluation of factors influencing the development of late Marek`s disease virus-induced immunosuppression: virus pathotype and host sex

    Get PDF
    Marek’s disease virus (MDV) is a herpesvirus that induces lymphoma and immunosuppression in chickens. MDV-induced immunosuppression (MDV-IS) is complex and can be divided into two phases: early-MDV-IS associated with cytolytic infection in the lymphoid organs in chickens lacking maternal antibodies against MDV (MAbs) and late-MDV-IS that appears later in the pathogenesis and occurs even in chickens bearing MAbs. We have recently developed a model to reproduce late-MDV-IS under laboratory conditions. This model evaluates late-MDV-IS indirectly by assessing the effect of MDV infection on the efficacy of infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) vaccines against challenge with ILT virus. In the present study, we have used this model to investigate the role of two factors (MDV pathotype and host sex) on the development of late-MDV-IS. Five MDV strains representing three different pathotypes: virulent (vMDV; 617A, GA), very virulent (vvMDV; Md5), and very virulent plus (vv+MDV; 648A, 686), were evaluated. Only vv+ strains were able to induce late-MDV-IS. An immunosuppression rank (IS-rank) was established based on the ability of MDV to reduce the efficacy of chicken embryo origin vaccine (values go from 0 to 100, with 100 being the highest immunosuppressive ability). The IS-rank of the evaluated MDV strains ranged from 5.97 (GA) to 20.8 (617A) in the vMDV strains, 5.97 to 16.24 in the vvMDV strain Md5, and 39.08 to 68.2 in the vv+ strains 648A and 686. In this study both male and female chickens were equally susceptible to MDV-IS by vv+MDV 686. Our findings suggest that late-MDV-IS is a unique feature of vv+ strains

    Deterministic Evolutionary Trajectories Influence Primary Tumor Growth: TRACERx Renal.

    Get PDF
    The evolutionary features of clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) have not been systematically studied to date. We analyzed 1,206 primary tumor regions from 101 patients recruited into the multi-center prospective study, TRACERx Renal. We observe up to 30 driver events per tumor and show that subclonal diversification is associated with known prognostic parameters. By resolving the patterns of driver event ordering, co-occurrence, and mutual exclusivity at clone level, we show the deterministic nature of clonal evolution. ccRCC can be grouped into seven evolutionary subtypes, ranging from tumors characterized by early fixation of multiple mutational and copy number drivers and rapid metastases to highly branched tumors with >10 subclonal drivers and extensive parallel evolution associated with attenuated progression. We identify genetic diversity and chromosomal complexity as determinants of patient outcome. Our insights reconcile the variable clinical behavior of ccRCC and suggest evolutionary potential as a biomarker for both intervention and surveillance

    Factors affecting drinking water vaccination intake in commercial poultry farms

    No full text
    Vaccines are important means of prevention and control of poultry diseases worldwide. Drinking water vaccination remains as one of the most common mass vaccine administration methods. Its efficiency relies on the vaccinated water consumed by the chickens. This study aims to determine the success rate of drinking water vaccination of commercial poultry farms in Malaysia and to evaluate factors affecting such practice. 5 poultry farms that would undergo drinking water vaccination were selected for study. Prior to vaccination, blue dyes (Cevamune®) were added in the drinking water tank and farm parameters were recorded. 2 hours post vaccination, 100 to 250 chickens (1% of house population) were randomly sampled and evaluated for vaccine intake. From the study, only 10% of the houses fulfilled the requirement of yielding a minimum of 90% positive vaccine intake. Result further revealed that ambient temperature, water restriction hours, stocking density, age of chick, and effort of workers to chase chicks during vaccination, have significantly (p>0.01) affected the outcome of drinking water vaccination which could be due to multiple factors. Existing practice of drinking water vaccine delivery should also be revised to better the outcome of this vaccine administration method

    Antimicrobial use and resistance in commercial village chickens: a study on knowledge and practices among farmers

    No full text
    The growth of commercial village chicken farming in Malaysia is improving with the involvement of new farmers due to its huge potential. A study was carried out in selected states of Malaysia to determine the practice of antimicrobial usage, the level of awareness on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) among the commercial village chicken farmers, and to identify the factors that are associated with the level of awareness on AMR among farmers. Questionnaire was distributed to the farmers via two methods, farm visit and online survey. The results from this study showed that majority (77%) of the commercial village chicken farmers use antimicrobial in their farms. Most of the farmers have an average level of awareness on AMR (56%). The results also suggested that there is association between the education level with the level of awareness on AMR (P<0.05). Therefore, the level of awareness among farmers was only moderate which means the farmers were not fully aware of AMR

    Characterization of Md5-BAC-REV-LTR virus as Marek’s disease vaccine in commercial meat-type chickens: protection and immunosuppression

    No full text
    Md5-BAC-REV-LTR is a recombinant Marek’s disease virus (MDV), with an insertion of the long terminal repeat (LTR) of reticuloendotheliosis virus (REV) into the genome of the highly virulent MDV strain rMd5. It has been shown that Md5-BAC-REV-LTR does not induce tumours and confers high protection against challenge with MDV in 15 × 7 chickens. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the protection and safety (in terms of oncogenicity and immunosuppression) of Md5-BAC-REV-LTR in commercial meat-type chickens bearing maternal antibodies against MDV. Our results show that sub-cutaneous administration of Md5-BAC-REV-LTR at 1 day of age conferred high protection (protection index PI = 84.2) against an early challenge (1 day) by contact exposure to shedder birds infected with the vv+ MDV 648A strain. In such stringent challenge conditions, Md5-BAC-REV-LTR was more protective than a commercial CVI988 (PI = 12.4) and similar to the experimental vaccine Md5-BACΔmeq (PI = 92.4). Furthermore, Md5-BAC-REV-LTR did not induce either tumours or immunosuppression in this study. Immunosuppression was evaluated by the relative lymphoid organ weights and also by the ability of the vaccine to induce late-MDV-induced immunosuppression associated with reactivation of the virus. This study shows that Md5-BAC-REV-LTR has the potential to be used as a MD vaccine and is highly protective against early challenge with vv+ MDV
    corecore