Determining the Protective Efficacy of Toll-Like Receptor Ligands to Minimize H9N2 Avian Influenza Virus Transmission in Chickens

Author:

Raj Sugandha,Alizadeh Mohammadali,Shoojadoost Bahram,Hodgins Douglas,Nagy Éva,Mubareka Samira,Karimi KhalilORCID,Behboudi Shahriar,Sharif Shayan

Abstract

Low-pathogenicity avian influenza viruses (AIV) of the H9N2 subtype can infect and cause disease in chickens. Little is known about the efficacy of immune-based strategies for reducing the transmission of these viruses. The present study investigated the efficacy of Toll-like receptor (TLR) ligands (CpG ODN 2007 and poly(I:C)) to reduce H9N2 AIV transmission from TLR-treated seeder (trial 1) or inoculated chickens (trial 2) to naive chickens. The results from trial 1 revealed that a low dose of CpG ODN 2007 led to the highest reduction in oral shedding, and a high dose of poly(I:C) was effective at reducing oral and cloacal shedding. Regarding transmission, the recipient chickens exposed to CpG ODN 2007 low-dose-treated seeder chickens showed a maximum reduction in shedding with the lowest number of AIV+ chickens. The results from trial 2 revealed a maximum reduction in oral and cloacal shedding in the poly(I:C) high-dose-treated chickens (recipients), followed by the low-dose CpG ODN 2007 group. In these two groups, the expression of type I interferons (IFNs), protein kinase R (PKR), interferon-induced transmembrane protein 3 (IFITM3), viperin, and (interleukin) IL-1β, IL-8, and 1L-18 was upregulated in the spleen, cecal tonsils and lungs. Hence, TLR ligands can reduce AIV transmission in chickens.

Funder

Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Chicken Farmers of Saskatchewan

Egg Farmers of Canada

Canadian Poultry Research Council

University of Guelph’s Food from Thought initiative

Arrell Food Institute Graduate Scholarship

U.K. Research and Innovation Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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