| Literature DB >> 30373662 |
Michelle Wille1,2, Caroline Bröjer3, Åke Lundkvist4, Josef D Järhult5.
Abstract
The natural reservoir for all influenza A viruses (IAVs) is wild birds, particularly dabbling ducks. During the autumn, viral prevalence can be very high in dabbling ducks (> 30%) in the Northern Hemisphere, and individuals may be repeatedly infected. Transmission and infection is through the fecal-oral route, whereby birds shed viruses in feces and conspecifics are infected though feeding in virus-contaminated water. In this study we wanted to assess two alternative infection routes: cloacal drinking and preening. Using experimental infections, we assessed patterns of infection using a combination of virus shedding, as assessed by real-time PCR from cloacal swabs, and patterns of viral replication using virus-immunohistochemistry of gastrointestinal tissues. The cloacal drinking experiment consisted of two trials using cloacal inoculation at two different time points to account for age differences, as well as a trial whereby ducks were allowed to take up virus-laden water through the cloaca. All ducks became infected, and rather than the bursa of Fabricius being the main site of replication, the colon had the highest intensity of replication, as inferred through immunohistochemistry. In experiments assessing preening, feathers were contaminated with virus-laden water and all ducks became infected, regardless of whether they were kept individually or together. Further, naive contacts were infected by the individuals whose feathers were virus-contaminated. Overall, we reinforce that IAV transmission in dabbling ducks is multifactorial-if exposed to virus-contaminated water ducks may be infected through dabbling, preening of infected feathers, and cloacal drinking.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30373662 PMCID: PMC6206871 DOI: 10.1186/s13567-018-0604-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Figure 1Conceptual questions raised in this study. A Whether birds may be infected directly through the cloaca, expanding the accepted fecal–oral route of transmission, and B, given the fecal–oral route of transmission, whether birds may become infected through preening, rather than being limited to water-bourne transmission and dabbling.
Experimental design for trials to assess alternate infection routes
| Experiment | Trial | # Ducks | Age of ducks (months) | Mode of inoculation | Housing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cloacal drinking | Cloacal inoculation | 5 | 4 | Inoculation of 2 mL virus into the cloaca with canula | Each duck in a separate cage immediately following inoculation |
| Cloacal inoculation | 5 | 6 | Inoculation of 2 mL virus into the cloaca with canula | Each duck in a separate cage immediately following inoculation | |
| Cloacal exposure | 4 | 5 | Placed in virus laden water (6 mL virus stock + 2 L water) in specially designed inoculation box | Each duck in a separate cage immediately following inoculation | |
| Preening | Preening cages | 5 | 6 | Bathed with virus laden water (3 mL virus stock + 1 L water) | Each duck in a separate cage immediately following inoculation |
| Preening transmission (inoculation) | 5 | 6 | Bathed with virus laden water (3 mL virus stock + 1 L water) | Ducks placed in an experimental room with conspecifics | |
| Preening transmission (contacts) | 5 | 6 | Unexposed contacts | Ducks placed in an experimental room with conspecifics |
Figure 2Patterns of infection in experimental Mallards. A, C, E Refer to cloacal drinking experiments, B, D, F refer to the preening experiments. A, B Virus shedding, represented by Cq values on an inverted Y-axis, where a low Cq value is indicative of high levels of shedding. For each trial, box and whiskers plots are shown for each day of the experiment which illustrate the median (black line) and spread of the data (upper and lower quartiles). Different colours correspond to different days. C, D Proportion of individuals with positive staining for IAV in each tissue across the gastrointestinal tract. The X axis is divided into experimental trial, and within trials subdivided into tissue from different parts of the gastrointestinal tract, J1 to B, ranging from light blue to dark blue. E, F Heatmap of intensity of infection as inferred by relative number of positive cells for each individual and tissue. Values range from 0 (no positive staining), 0.5 (positive cells present), 1 (mild), 2 (moderate), to 3 (marked staining). Each individual for each experiment is plotted along the Y axis (R, B, G, Y, W), and tissue type across the X axis. For C–F, tissues assessed are two sections of jejunum J1, J2, two sections of ileum I3, I4, colon C, and bursa B. An asterisk indicates no bursal tissue could be identified. In the final cloacal drinking trial, only four ducks were included, where all other experiments have n = 5. Intensity scores and Cq values for individual ducks are presented in Additional file 2.
Figure 3Select tissues following immunohistochemical staining to detect nucleoprotein of influenza A. A The bursa of Fabricius, when present, did not show virus antigen expression. B Positive staining of surface epithelium on the tips of villi in the colon. This tissue was scored as a “3” as positive staining is “marked”. Viral antigen expression is inferred by red staining in the nucleus of surface epithelium. Tissues have been counterstained with hematoxylin and appear blue. Original magnification is 200×.