Transcriptomic insights into early responses of the uterovaginal junction and vagina to avian influenza virus infection in turkey breeder hens
Sunantha Kosonsiriluk, Pitchaya Santativongchai, Kent M. Reed, Marissa M. Studniski, Ben W. Wileman, Kahina S. Boukherroub

TL;DR
This study explores how turkey hens' reproductive tissues respond early to avian influenza virus infection, revealing molecular changes that could affect fertility and health.
Contribution
The study identifies tissue-specific transcriptomic responses in the uterovaginal junction and vagina during early avian influenza virus infection in turkey hens.
Findings
Symptomatic turkey hens showed significant gene expression changes in the uterovaginal junction linked to cellular remodeling and metabolic disruption.
The vagina exhibited distinct gene expression patterns, with upregulated biosynthesis pathways and downregulated energy production and vascular development.
Early immune activation in the vagina may later compromise barrier integrity, potentially impacting fertility and disease resistance.
Abstract
Avian influenza virus (AIV) infections, even with low-pathogenic strains (LPAIVs), can severely disrupt reproduction in turkey breeder hens. Although the vagina and uterovaginal junction (UVJ) are among the earliest mucosal sites exposed to pathogens, their early transcriptomic responses to LPAIV infection are uncharacterized. This study investigated early transcriptomic changes in these tissues during both presymptomatic and symptomatic stages of LPAIV infection (n = 4/group/tissue). Flocks for sampling were classified as presymptomatic or symptomatic based on drinker swab LPAIV testing and egg production records. Presymptomatic group consisted of infected hens from LPAIV-negative barns. These flocks had stable egg production at the time of collection but with a subsequent egg drop. The symptomatic group included infected hens from LPAIV-positive barns with reduced egg production and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfluenza Virus Research Studies · Virology and Viral Diseases · Animal Nutrition and Physiology
