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Reducing Campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine

Campylobacter is the main cause of human gastroenteritis worldwide, with 50 to 80% of the cases related to consumption of poultry products. Maternal antibodies (MAB) from commercial breeder flocks may protect their progeny against infection during the first few weeks of life. We here studied the pre...

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Autores principales: Haems, Kristof, Van Rysselberghe, Nathalie, Goossens, Evy, Strubbe, Diederik, Rasschaert, Geertrui, Martel, An, Pasmans, Frank, Garmyn, An
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10522981/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37748236
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2023.103075
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author Haems, Kristof
Van Rysselberghe, Nathalie
Goossens, Evy
Strubbe, Diederik
Rasschaert, Geertrui
Martel, An
Pasmans, Frank
Garmyn, An
author_facet Haems, Kristof
Van Rysselberghe, Nathalie
Goossens, Evy
Strubbe, Diederik
Rasschaert, Geertrui
Martel, An
Pasmans, Frank
Garmyn, An
author_sort Haems, Kristof
collection PubMed
description Campylobacter is the main cause of human gastroenteritis worldwide, with 50 to 80% of the cases related to consumption of poultry products. Maternal antibodies (MAB) from commercial breeder flocks may protect their progeny against infection during the first few weeks of life. We here studied the prevalence of Campylobacter antibody titers in broiler breeder flocks and to which extent immunization of broiler breeders increases maternal anti-Campylobacter titers in their progeny and protects the offspring against Campylobacter colonization. Two vaccines were used: a bacterin mix of 13 Campylobacter strains and a subunit vaccine comprising 6 immunodominant Campylobacter antigens. All sampled on-farm breeder flocks were positive for anti-Campylobacter antibodies, yet in some breeder flocks only very low titers were detected. Vaccination of SPF broiler breeder flocks with both subunit and bacterin vaccines resulted in a prolonged presence of anti-Campylobacter antibodies in the serum and intestinal mucus of chicks. These bacterin- or subunit vaccine-induced MAB conferred protection against Campylobacter colonization in chicks until 7 and 21 d of age, respectively, but only at a low challenge dose (10(2.5) cfu). The concentration of MAB in the mucus is probably too low to sufficiently capture Campylobacter when higher challenge doses are used. In conclusion, vaccinating broiler breeders protects their offspring against Campylobacter colonization under low pathogen exposure conditions.
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spelling pubmed-105229812023-09-28 Reducing Campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine Haems, Kristof Van Rysselberghe, Nathalie Goossens, Evy Strubbe, Diederik Rasschaert, Geertrui Martel, An Pasmans, Frank Garmyn, An Poult Sci IMMUNOLOGY, HEALTH AND DISEASE Campylobacter is the main cause of human gastroenteritis worldwide, with 50 to 80% of the cases related to consumption of poultry products. Maternal antibodies (MAB) from commercial breeder flocks may protect their progeny against infection during the first few weeks of life. We here studied the prevalence of Campylobacter antibody titers in broiler breeder flocks and to which extent immunization of broiler breeders increases maternal anti-Campylobacter titers in their progeny and protects the offspring against Campylobacter colonization. Two vaccines were used: a bacterin mix of 13 Campylobacter strains and a subunit vaccine comprising 6 immunodominant Campylobacter antigens. All sampled on-farm breeder flocks were positive for anti-Campylobacter antibodies, yet in some breeder flocks only very low titers were detected. Vaccination of SPF broiler breeder flocks with both subunit and bacterin vaccines resulted in a prolonged presence of anti-Campylobacter antibodies in the serum and intestinal mucus of chicks. These bacterin- or subunit vaccine-induced MAB conferred protection against Campylobacter colonization in chicks until 7 and 21 d of age, respectively, but only at a low challenge dose (10(2.5) cfu). The concentration of MAB in the mucus is probably too low to sufficiently capture Campylobacter when higher challenge doses are used. In conclusion, vaccinating broiler breeders protects their offspring against Campylobacter colonization under low pathogen exposure conditions. Elsevier 2023-08-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10522981/ /pubmed/37748236 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2023.103075 Text en © 2023 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of Poultry Science Association Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle IMMUNOLOGY, HEALTH AND DISEASE
Haems, Kristof
Van Rysselberghe, Nathalie
Goossens, Evy
Strubbe, Diederik
Rasschaert, Geertrui
Martel, An
Pasmans, Frank
Garmyn, An
Reducing Campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine
title Reducing Campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine
title_full Reducing Campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine
title_fullStr Reducing Campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine
title_full_unstemmed Reducing Campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine
title_short Reducing Campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine
title_sort reducing campylobacter colonization in broilers by active immunization of naive broiler breeders using a bacterin and subunit vaccine
topic IMMUNOLOGY, HEALTH AND DISEASE
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10522981/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37748236
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2023.103075
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