Nazeer, N., et al. “Folic Acid Enhances Proinflammatory and Antiviral Molecular Pathways in Chicken B-Lymphocytes Infected With a Mild Infectious Bursal Disease Virus”. British Poultry Science, 2021, pp. 1-13, https://doi.org/10.1080/00071668.2021.1958298.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Nazeer, N.
Author: Ahmed, M.
Author: Yitbarek, A.
Author: Vargas-Bermúdez, D. S.
Author: Rodriguez-Lecompte, J. C.
Author: Jaime, J.
Author: Uribe-Diaz, S.
Date Issued
2021
Date Published Online
2021-08-13
Abstract

1. This study evaluated the effect of folic acid (FA) supplementation on the proinflammatory and antiviral molecular pathways of B-lymphocytes infected with a modified live IBDV (ST-12) mild vaccine strain during a timed post-infection analysis. 2. A chicken B-lymphocytes (DT-40) cell line was cultured in triplicate at a concentration of 5 × 105 cells per well in 24-well plates; and was divided into three groups: 1: No virus, FA; 2: Virus, no FA; 3: Virus + FA at a concentration of 3.96 mM. The experiment was repeated three times. 3. Cells in groups 2 and 3 were infected with a modified live IBDV (ST-12) mild vaccine strain at one multiplicity of infection (MOI: 1). After 1 hour of virus adsorption, samples were collected at 0, 3, 6, 12, 24 and 36 hours post-infection (hpi). 4. The modified live IBDV (ST-12) mild vaccine strain triggered a B-lymphocyte specific immune response associated with the upregulation of genes involved in virus recognition (Igß), virus sensing (TLR-2, TLR-3, TLR-4 and MDA5), signal transduction and regulation (TRIF, MyD88 and IRF7), and the antiviral effector molecules (IFN-α, OAS, PKR, and viperin). 5. FA supplementation modulated IBDV replication and regulated the proinflammatory and antiviral downstream molecular pathways. 6. In conclusion, the low virulent pathotype serotype I modified live IBDV (ST-12) mild vaccine strain was able to trigger and mount an immune response in chicken B-lymphocytes without affecting B-cell viability. FA supplementation modulated B lymphocytes response and improved their innate immune proinflammatory and antiviral response molecular pathways.

Language

  • English
Page range
1-13
Host Title
British Poultry Science
Host Abbreviated Title
British Poultry Science
ISSN
0007-1668
1466-1799