Endogenous Avian Leukosis Virus in Combination with Serotype 2 Marek's Disease Virus Significantly Boosted the Incidence of Lymphoid Leukosis-Like Bursal Lymphomas in Susceptible Chickens

Author:

Mays Jody K.1,Black-Pyrkosz Alexis1,Mansour Tamer23,Schutte Brian C.2,Chang Shuang1,Dong Kunzhe4,Hunt Henry D.1,Fadly Aly M.1,Zhang Lei156,Zhang Huanmin1

Affiliation:

1. United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Avian Disease and Oncology Laboratory, East Lansing, Michigan, USA

2. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, USA

3. Department of Clinical Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Mansoura, Mansoura, Egypt

4. ORISE Fellow, USDA, Agricultural Research Service, Avian Disease and Oncology Laboratory, East Lansing, Michigan, USA

5. U.S. Forest Service International Programs, Washington, DC, USA

6. Institute of Special Wild Economic Animal and Plant Science, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Changchun, Jilin, China

Abstract

Lymphoid leukosis (LL)-like lymphoma is a low-incidence yet costly and poorly understood disease of domestic chickens. The observed unique characteristics of LL-like lymphomas are that the incidence of the disease is chicken line dependent; pathologically, it appeared to mimic avian leukosis but is free of exogenous ALV infection; inoculation of the nonpathogenic ALV-E or MDV-2 (SB-1) boosts the incidence of the disease; and inoculation of both the nonpathogenic ALV-E and SB-1 escalates it to much higher levels. This study was designed to test the impact of two new ALV-E isolates, recently derived from commercial broiler breeder flocks, in combination with the nonpathogenic SB-1 on LL-like lymphoma incidences in both an experimental egg layer line of chickens and a commercial broiler breeder line of chickens under a controlled condition. Data from this study provided an additional piece of experimental evidence on the potency of nonpathogenic ALV-E, MDV-2, and ALV-E plus MDV-2 in boosting the incidence of LL-like lymphomas in susceptible chickens. This study also generated the first piece of genomic evidence that suggests host transcriptomic variation plays an important role in modulating LL-like lymphoma formation.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

Reference83 articles.

1. A Method for the Control of Lymphoid Leukosis in Chickens

2. The control of lymphoid leukosis in a flock White Plymouth Rock chickens

3. Fadly A, Nair V. 2008. Leukosis/sarcoma group, p 514–568. In Saif Y, Fadly A, Glisson JR, McDougald LR, Nolan LK, Swayne DE (ed), Diseases of poultry, 12th ed. Blackwell Publishing, Ames, IA.

4. Multiple arrangements of viral DNA and an activated host oncogene in bursal lymphomas

5. Selective integration of avian leukosis virus in different hematopoietic tissues

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