How to translate text using browser tools
14 March 2022 Distribution of Infectious Bronchitis Virus Resistance in a Naïve Chicken Population
Olivia Lockyear, Cassandra Breedlove, Kellye Joiner, Haroldo Toro
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Resistance to infectious bronchitis (IB) is a polygenic trait, but little is known about how resistance distributes in the host population. In this study, a relatively large number (n = 369) of specific-pathogen-free white leghorn chickens (Gallus gallus) were challenged with an Arkansas -type virulent IB virus (IBV), and resistance was evaluated 5 days after challenge by viral load (IBV RNA) in the trachea and cecal tonsils, as well as by tracheal histomorphometry (mucosal thickness and lymphocyte infiltration). Contrary to expectations, results showed a non-Gaussian distribution of resistance of the whole population against challenge. Indeed, most chickens accumulated toward higher resistance, i.e., lower viral loads and less tracheal damage. The current results also indicated limited differences in resistance to IBV between sexes. Tracheal viral load was significantly higher in males than that in females, but tracheal damage did not significantly differ between sexes. The difference in tracheal viral load found in males and females could have implications for viral spread in commercial chicken populations.

Olivia Lockyear, Cassandra Breedlove, Kellye Joiner, and Haroldo Toro "Distribution of Infectious Bronchitis Virus Resistance in a Naïve Chicken Population," Avian Diseases 66(1), 101-105, (14 March 2022). https://doi.org/10.1637/21-00092
Received: 1 October 2021; Accepted: 13 January 2022; Published: 14 March 2022
KEYWORDS
chicken
coronavirus
disease resistance
infectious bronchitis
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top