Evaluating how infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) infection influences influenza H3N8 challenge in chickens
Salik Nazki, Chandana Tennakoon, Vishwanatha R. A. P. Reddy, Yana Chen, Jean-Remy Sadeyen, Andrew J. Brodrick, Munir Iqbal, Holly Shelton, Andrew J. Broadbent

TL;DR
This study investigates how a virus that weakens chicken immunity affects another flu virus's behavior in chickens.
Contribution
The study reveals that prior IBDV infection has limited impact on waterfowl-origin influenza virus in chickens.
Findings
IBDV infection did not significantly affect influenza virus replication or shedding in chickens.
IBDV increased influenza virus genetic diversity by modestly increasing amino acid substitutions.
Influenza virus was shed from the upper respiratory tract but not transmitted to other chickens.
Abstract
Infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) causes an endemic immunosuppressive disease in chickens. Prior exposure to IBDV influences the pathogenesis and shedding of chicken strains of influenza A virus (IAV), but its effect on waterfowl strains is poorly understood. To address this, we inoculated 14-day-old specific pathogen-free chickens with low pathogenicity avian influenza strain A/Mallard/Alberta/156/01 (H3N8) and compared the replication, shedding, pathogenesis, transmission and intra-host evolution between immunocompetent chickens and chickens that had IBDV-mediated immune dysregulation due to a prior infection with strain F52/70 at 2 days of age. The IAV replicated in the upper respiratory tract, and the virus was shed from the oropharyngeal cavity, but there was no shedding from the cloaca and no transmission to sentinel chickens. IAV replication in chickens was associated with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirology and Viral Diseases · Influenza Virus Research Studies · Immune responses and vaccinations
