Summary Med. Weter. 76 (1), 34-40, 2020
full text

| TOMAS MISKINIS, MARTIN LIMAN, HENNING BISCHOFF, VIDMANTAS BIZOKAS |
| Chicken interferon gamma fold expression level
and tracheal lesion score differences between
commercial broiler chickens vaccinated with live
and vectored ILT vaccines |
| Infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) is a respiratory tract disease affecting chickens around the world. The
disease generates severe production losses due to increased mortality, decreased egg production, delayed body
weight gain, and a predisposition to other respiratory pathogens causing enormous economic losses to the
intensive poultry industry. Two licensed vaccines, comprising live or vectored ILT, are available to control the
disease. The present trial was conducted to determine changes in chicken interferon gamma fold expression
levels in chicken spleens and to evaluate tracheal lesion scores before and after vaccination with live and vectored
infectious laryngotracheitis vaccines. Broilers were kept under commercial conditions until 35 days of age.
Spleen and trachea samples were taken at 14, 28, and 35 days of age. Tracheas were stained with H&E, histopathology
was performed, and the INF-γ fold expression level in spleen samples was analyzed. In the spleens of
birds vaccinated with the live ILT vaccine, the increase in INF-γ expression levels was statistically significantly
(p < 0.01) lower at 28 days of age, or 7 days post vaccination, (trial 1) and higher at 35 days of age, or 14 days
post vaccination, (both trials). At 7 days post vaccination with the live ILT vaccine, the mean tracheal lesion
score was significantly higher (p < 0.01) than it was in the control group (both trials). At 14 days post vaccination
with the live ILT vaccine, the mean tracheal lesion score was significantly higher (p < 0.05) than it was in the
control group 3 (trial 1). No significant differences were found between the control group 3 and group 2, which
was vaccinated with the vectored HVT/LT vaccine (both trials). The results of the histology of trachea lesions
indicate that vaccination with live ILT may have induced early local immunity. The INF-γ analysis results
might indicate that the birds in group 2 (HVT/LT) did not develop local immunity until 35 days of age From
the practical point of view, the vectored ILT vaccine is more beneficial because of its ease of administration
in the hatchery, lower labor cost, and the absence of clinical signs post vaccination. Its potential drawback,
however, is poor local immunity and the slow onset of optimal immunity in commercial broiler chickens |
| Keywords: Chicken INF-γ, ILT, HVT/LT, local immunity |