Eimeria tenella apical membrane 2 overexpression enhances pathogenicity and immunity in chickens
Shanbo Wu, Lihui Wang, Jinwen Wang, Wenqi Han, Jiayu Bai, Fanghe Zhao, Yu Yu, Qiping Zhao, Shunhai Zhu, Hongyu Han, Hui Dong

TL;DR
Overexpressing a key protein in a chicken parasite boosts its harmful effects but also makes it a better vaccine candidate.
Contribution
EtAMA2 overexpression reveals its dual role in enhancing pathogenicity and inducing immunity in chickens.
Findings
EtAMA2-OE increased invasion efficiency and caused severe cecal pathology in chickens.
Immunization with EtAMA2-OE significantly reduced oocyst shedding and cecal lesions.
EtAMA2 functions as both a virulence factor and a potential vaccine antigen.
Abstract
Eimeria tenella, a highly pathogenic apicomplexan parasite, causes severe avian coccidiosis, threatening global poultry production. Apical membrane antigens (AMAs), conserved proteins in apicomplexan parasites, are critical for host cell invasion, making them promising vaccine targets. In this study, we constructed an the overexpression strain of E. tenella AMA2 (EtAMA2-OE) and evaluated its pathogenicity and immunogenicity. Transcriptional profiling of EtAMA2 during infection was conducted using reverse transcription quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). A homozygous EtAMA2-OE strain was generated using plasmid transfection, drug selection, and flow cytometry. Pathogenicity was assessed through in vitro sporozoite invasion assays and in vivo evaluations, including cecal lesion scoring, oocyst shedding, and weigh-gain monitoring in chicks. Furthermore,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoccidia and coccidiosis research · Helminth infection and control · Parasitic Infections and Diagnostics
