Literature DB >> 33205165

Comparison of the Pathogenicity of Five Clostridium perfringens Isolates Using an Eimeria maxima Coinfection Necrotic Enteritis Disease Model in Commercial Broiler Chickens.

Liheng Liu1,2, Xianghe Yan3, Hyun Lillehoj1, Zhifeng Sun1, Hongyan Zhao1,4, Zhezi Xianyu1, Youngsub Lee1, Stephen Melville5, Changqin Gu1,6, Yunfei Wang7, Mingmin Lu1, Charles Li1.   

Abstract

Clostridium perfringens (CP) is the etiologic agent of necrotic enteritis (NE) in broiler chickens that is responsible for massive economic losses in the poultry industry in response to voluntary reduction and withdrawal of antibiotic growth promoters. Large variations exist in the CP isolates in inducing intestinal NE lesions. However, limited information is available on CP isolate genetics in inducing NE with other predisposing factors. This study investigated the ability of five CP isolates from different sources to influence NE pathogenesis by using an Eimeria maxima (EM) coinfection NE model: Str.13 (from soil), LLY_N11 (healthy chicken intestine), SM101 (food poisoning), Del1 (netB+tpeL-) and LLY_Tpel17 (netB+tpeL+) for NE-afflicted chickens. The 2-wk-old broiler chickens were preinfected with EM (5 × 103 oocysts) followed by CP infection (around 1 × 109 colony-forming units per chicken). The group of the LLY_Tpel17 isolate with EM coinfection had 25% mortality. No mortality was observed in the groups infected with EM alone, all CP alone, or dual infections of EM/other CP isolates. In this model of EM/CP coinfections, the relative percentages of body weight gain showed statistically significant decreases in all EM/CP groups except the EM/SM101 group when compared with the sham control group. Evident gut lesions were only observed in the three groups of EM/LLY_N11, EM/Del1, and EM/LLY_Tpel17, all of which possessed an essential NE pathogenesis locus in their genomes. Our studies indicate that LLY_Tpel17 is highly pathogenic to induce severe gut lesions and would be a good CP challenge strain for studies investigating pathogenesis and evaluating the protection efficacy for antibiotic alternative approaches.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990 Clostridium perfringenszzm321990 ; zzm321990 Eimeria maximazzm321990 ; necrotic enteritis; pathogenicity

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33205165     DOI: 10.1637/aviandiseases-D-19-00098

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Avian Dis        ISSN: 0005-2086            Impact factor:   1.577


  1 in total

1.  Immunization with Pooled Antigens for Clostridium perfringens Conferred Partial Protection against Experimental Necrotic Enteritis in Broiler Chickens.

Authors:  Baohong Yuan; Zhifeng Sun; Mingmin Lu; Hyun Lillehoj; Youngsub Lee; Liheng Liu; Xianghe Yan; Danchen Aaron Yang; Charles Li
Journal:  Vaccines (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-20
  1 in total

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