Investigating the role of interleukin 10 on Eimeria intestinal pathogenesis in broiler chickens

•Intestinal cytokine responses differ by section during a mixed Eimeria infection.•Duodenal intestinal epithelial cell IL-10 and IFNγ increase during Eimeria infection.•Oral antibody to IL-10 improves jejunum villi height. Eimeria species are intestinal protozoan parasites that cause lack of product...

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Veröffentlicht in:Veterinary immunology and immunopathology 2019-12, Vol.218, p.109934-109934, Article 109934
Hauptverfasser: Arendt, Maria, Elissa, Jonathan, Schmidt, Natalie, Michael, Emily, Potter, Nicole, Cook, Mark, Knoll, Laura J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Intestinal cytokine responses differ by section during a mixed Eimeria infection.•Duodenal intestinal epithelial cell IL-10 and IFNγ increase during Eimeria infection.•Oral antibody to IL-10 improves jejunum villi height. Eimeria species are intestinal protozoan parasites that cause lack of production, malabsorption and mortality in floor raised chickens. Administering an oral antibody to interleukin 10 (aIL-10) reduces the symptoms of coccidiosis in broilers, indicating interleukin 10 (IL-10) is key to Eimeria pathology. IL-10 is an anti-inflammatory cytokine and acts as a stand down signal to reduce inflammation and host pathology during disease. Related protozoan parasites exploit IL-10 to reduce pathogen-damaging host inflammatory responses. We hypothesize that IL-10 is increased during Eimeria infection through an unknown host-pathogen interaction, and by feeding aIL-10 to neutralize excess IL-10 the bird is allowed to mount an effective immune response to Eimeria. To determine the effects of aIL-10 during the intestinal immune response, intestinal pathology and the relationship between IL-10, interferon gamma (IFNγ) and Eimeria infection were evaluated in this study. In both experiments, broilers were administered either a 10x dose of Advent® Eimeria vaccine or saline. Duodenum, jejunum and cecum samples were collected, processed, stained and examined under a microscope. Evaluation of intestinal histomorphology during aIL-10 administration showed minimal differences in birds fed aIL-10 during infection compared to animals fed a control antibody during Eimeria infection. To further evaluate aIL-10’s positive effect during infection, immunofluorescent histochemistry was performed on chicken intestines days 3-7 post Eimeria infection for IL-10 and IFNγ presence in intestinal mucosa in control and infected birds, in regions with and without visible Eimeria burden. IL-10 and IFNγ had significant changes between days 4.5-7 post-infection in birds fed aIL-10 compared to animals fed a control antibody. Overall we found that the duodenum had increased IL-10 presence and increased IFNγ presence, and the jejunum and cecum had decreased IL-10 presence and decreased IFNγ presence. These differences in spatial regulation of IL-10 and IFNγ may indicate Eimeria species induce slightly different cytokine responses.
ISSN:0165-2427
1873-2534
DOI:10.1016/j.vetimm.2019.109934