| Literature DB >> 29208016 |
Alexandre Thibodeau1,2,3, Philippe Fravalo1,2,3, Audrey Perron1,2,3, Sylvette Laurent- Lewandowski1,2,3, Ann Letellier4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Campylobacter jejuni is a major cause of foodborne disease having chickens as an important reservoir. Its control at the farm would lower the contamination of the final products and therefore also lower the risk of transmission to humans. At the farm, C. jejuni is rarely found in chickens before they reach 2 weeks of age. Past studies have shown that maternal antibodies could hamper C. jejuni gut colonization. The objective of this study was to compare protocols to use in order to produce anti-C. jejuni antibodies derived from egg yolks in the perspective to be used as feed additives for the control of chicken C. jejuni colonization. Laying hens were naturally contaminated with four well-characterized strains or injected with either outer membrane proteins or formalin-killed whole bacteria derived from these same strains. Eggs were collected and IgYs present in the yolks were extracted. The amount and the specificity of the recovered antibodies were characterized.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody; Campylobacter jejuni control; Chicken colonization; Egg yolk IgY; Immunoglobulin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29208016 PMCID: PMC5717825 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-017-0346-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Fig. 1Quantification by ELISA of total IgY found in the egg yolks, post-injection of the laying hens. Each result represents the mean IgY concentrations in extracts from each laying hens group. GR2-INO (orally inoculated), GR3-OMP (injected with OMP), GR4-BACT (injected with formalin-killed whole bacteria), GR1-CTL (control groups); The arrows on the x-axis mark the boosters
Fig. 2Quantification by ELISA of C. jejuni specific IgY found in the egg yolks, post-injection of the laying hens. Each result represents the mean IgY concentrations in extracts from each laying hens group. GR2-INO (orally inoculated), GR3-OMP (injected with OMP), GR4-BACT (injected with formalin-killed whole bacteria), GR1-CTL (control groups); The arrows on the x-axis mark the boosters
Fig. 3Immunoblot analysis of egg-yolks derived IgY recognition profiles of total proteins of different C. jejuni strains. No proteins were recognized by group GR1-CTL egg yolks extracts. Lane 1: ladder, Lane 2: total proteins of the strain tested stained with Coomassie blue; Lanes 3 to 5, respectively: proteins recognized by the IgY extract from GR2-INO (orally inoculated), GR3-OMP (OMP) and GR4-BACT (formalin-killed whole bacteria); (a–d) Homologous C. jejuni strains: A2008A, B2008A, G2008B, RM 1221; (e–h) = Heterologous C. jejuni strains: 81116, 81-176, ATCC 700819, ATCC 33291
Agglutination reaction after contact of each IgY extract with a suspension of different C. jejuni strain
|
| GR1-CTL IgY extract | GR2-INO IgY extract | GR3-OMP IgY extract | GR4-BACT IgY extract |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A2008A | None | Positive | Positive | Positive |
| B2008a | None | Positive | Positive | Positive |
| G2008B | None | Positive | Positive | Positive |
| RM1221 | None | Positive | Positive | Positive |
| 81116 | None | Positive | None | None |
| 81-176 | None | None | None | None |
| ATCC 700819 | None | None | None | None |
| ATCC 33291 | None | None | None | None |
None = no observed reaction; Positive = observed reaction
Homologous C. jejuni strains: A2008A, B2008A, G2008B, RM 1221
Heterologous C. jejuni strains: 81116, 81-176, ATCC 700819, ATCC 33291
GR2-INO (orally inoculated), GR3-OMP (immunized with OMP), GR4-BACT (immunized with formalin-killed whole bacteria), GR1-CTL (control group)
Bactericidal efficiency of IgY extracts
| Strain | GR1-CTL | GR2-INO | GR3-OMP | GR4-BACT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Homologous | ||||
| A2008A | 17.35a (6.53) | 57.57b (3.39) | 50.30b (4.39) | 53.20b (17.13) |
| B2008A | 29.57a (12.60) | 95.12bc (5.50) | 60.45bd (17.78) | 68.20bd (8.05) |
| G2008B | 21.50a (14.73) | 99.61bc (0.44) | 48.24bd (26.87) | 80.08bd (13.22) |
| RM 1221 | 22.34a (12.52) | 49.71c (20.42) | 84.11bd (9.79) | 64.75b (20.98) |
| Mean homologous | 22.62a (12.41) | 79.92bc (24.67) | 60.03bd (21.76) | 67.35b (17.21) |
| Heterologous | ||||
| 81116 | 34.92 (21.48) | 39.07 (22.01) | 33.34 (8.97) | 33.46 (16.54) |
| 81-176 | 34.92 (21.48) | 39.07 (22.01) | 33.34 (8.97) | 33.46 (16.54) |
| ATCC 700819 | 14.42a (5.04) | 37.10b (7.76) | 42.89b (33.36) | 46.31b (3.08) |
| ATCC 33291 | 6.54a (5.17) | 26.30b (10.00) | 31.53b (12.54) | 28.76b (10.96) |
| Mean heterologous | 20.95a (18.58) | 34.86b (14.78) | 35.55b (9.65) | 35.79b (12.88) |
Mean reduction percentage of the initial count for the homologous and heterologous strains
() the standard deviation for 3 biological replicates
Homologous C. jejuni strains: A2008A, B2008A, G2008B, RM 1221
Heterologous C. jejuni strains: 81116 and ATCC 33291
On a same row a different than b and c different than d, P < 0.05, Kruskal–Wallis test followed by pairs of Mann–Whitney tests
GR2-INO (orally inoculated), GR3-OMP (immunized with OMP), GR4-BACT (immunized with formalin-killed whole bacteria), GR1-CTL (control group)