Intestinal immune responses to coccidiosis

Intestinal parasitism is a major stress factor leading to malnutrition and lowered performance and production efficiency of livestock and poultry. Coccidiosis is an intestinal infection caused by intracellular protozoan parasites belonging to several different species of Eimeria. Infection with cocc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental and comparative immunology 2000-03, Vol.24 (2), p.303-324
Hauptverfasser: Yun, C.H, Lillehoj, H.S, Lillehoj, E.P
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Lillehoj, H.S
Lillehoj, E.P
description Intestinal parasitism is a major stress factor leading to malnutrition and lowered performance and production efficiency of livestock and poultry. Coccidiosis is an intestinal infection caused by intracellular protozoan parasites belonging to several different species of Eimeria. Infection with coccidia parasites seriously impairs the growth and feed utilization of chickens and costs the US poultry industry more than $1.5 billion in annual losses. Although acquired immunity to Eimeria develops following natural infection, due to the complex life cycle and intricate host immune response to Eimeria, vaccine development has been difficult and a better understanding of the basic immunobiology of pertinent host–parasite interactions is necessary for developing effective immunological control strategies against coccidiosis. Chickens infected with Eimeria produce parasite specific antibodies in both the circulation and mucosal secretions but humoral immunity plays only a minor role in protection against this disease. Rather, recent evidence implicates cell-mediated immunity as the major factor conferring resistance to coccidiosis. This review will summarize current understanding of the avian intestinal immune system and its response to Eimeria as well as provide a conceptual overview of the complex molecular and cellular events involved in intestinal immunity to coccidiosis. It is anticipated that increased knowledge of the interaction between parasites and host immunity will stimulate the birth of novel immunological and molecular biological concepts in the control of intestinal parasitism.
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subjects Animals
Antibodies, Protozoan - biosynthesis
Chickens
Coccidiosis
Coccidiosis - immunology
Coccidiosis - prevention & control
Coccidiosis - veterinary
Cytokine
Eimeria
Eimeria - immunology
Eimeria - pathogenicity
Intestinal Mucosa - immunology
Intestinal Mucosa - parasitology
Mucosal immunity
Poultry
Poultry Diseases - immunology
Poultry Diseases - parasitology
title Intestinal immune responses to coccidiosis
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