Literature DB >> 16537164

The influence of immunizing dose size and schedule on immunity to subsequent challenge with antigenically distinct strains of Eimeria maxima.

Damer P Blake1, Patricia Hesketh, Andrew Archer, Fionnadh Carroll, Martin W Shirley, Adrian L Smith.   

Abstract

Eimeria maxima, the most immunogenic of the Eimeriidae that infect the chicken, is characterized by the presence of antigenic diversity within field isolates. In priming/challenge experiments immunity to homologous infection is essentially complete while immunity against challenge by a heterologous strain is often only partial. The phenotype "escape from immune protection" is known to be influenced by both host and parasite genotypes but the impact of varied immunization dose and schedule remains poorly documented. In this manuscript we report that an immunizing dose between <or=5 and <or=20 sporulated E. maxima oocysts is consistently capable of stimulating complete (>99.99%) protective immunity against challenge by 100 oocysts of a homologous strain. In contrast, complete immunity against a heterologous strain was never observed, although increasing the immunizing dose size did frequently reduce oocyst production arising from subsequent heterologous challenge. Differences in cross-protective immunizing capacity between two strains of E. maxima were evident as the H strain consistently stimulated a more potent protective immune response than the W strain. Similarly, increasing the number of immunizing doses of the E. maxima W strain (but not the H strain) increased immune protection against subsequent heterologous challenge. When combined with previously published data the results described here suggest that the E. maxima genome encodes a pool of antigens that are capable of stimulating an immune response cross-protective against more than one strain. These antigens supplement a separate restricted pool of antigens that are capable of stimulating stronger, but strain-specific, protective immune responses.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16537164     DOI: 10.1080/03079450500368292

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Avian Pathol        ISSN: 0307-9457            Impact factor:   3.378


  3 in total

1.  Dissecting the Genomic Architecture of Resistance to Eimeria maxima Parasitism in the Chicken.

Authors:  Kay Boulton; Matthew J Nolan; Zhiguang Wu; Valentina Riggio; Oswald Matika; Kimberley Harman; Paul M Hocking; Nat Bumstead; Pat Hesketh; Andrew Archer; Stephen C Bishop; Pete Kaiser; Fiona M Tomley; David A Hume; Adrian L Smith; Damer P Blake; Androniki Psifidi
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2018-11-26       Impact factor: 4.599

2.  Immunoprotection against mixed Eimeria spp. infections in goat kids induced by X-irradiated oocysts.

Authors:  Emilio Barba; Aránzazu Carmen Guedes; José Manuel Molina; Sergio Martín; María Carmen Muñoz; Otilia Ferrer; Pedro Carlos Lara; Carlos Hermosilla; Anja Taubert; Antonio Ruiz
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2022-03-03       Impact factor: 2.383

3.  Analysis of differentially expressed genes in two immunologically distinct strains of Eimeria maxima using suppression subtractive hybridization and dot-blot hybridization.

Authors:  Dandan Liu; Jianmei Li; Liqin Cao; Shangshang Wang; Hongxiao Han; Yantao Wu; Jianping Tao
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2014-06-03       Impact factor: 3.876

  3 in total

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