Author/Authors :
Berndt، نويسنده , , Angela and Methner، نويسنده , , U، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Poultry represents an important source of Salmonella infection in man. Despite intensive research on immunity, little is known about the involvement of T cell sub-populations in the immunological response of chickens against infection with non-host-adapted Salmonella (S.) serovars. In this study, the T cell composition of blood lymphocytes (CD4+CD8+; CD4+CD8−; CD4−CD8+; CD8+TcR1+; CD8−TcR1+, CD8+TcR1−) after oral administration of the non-attenuated S. typhimurium wild-type strain 421 (infection) or the attenuated vaccine strain Salmonella vac® T (immunization) to day-old chicks was investigated and compared with non-treated chickens by flow cytofluorometry. Additionally, the occurrence of T cell sub-populations (CD4+; CD8+; TcR1+(γδ); TcR2+(αβ1)) in ceca, spleen and bursa of Fabricius of the birds was studied immunohistologically. Blood samples and tissues were examined between days 1 and 12 of age.
inoculated with S. typhimurium 421 or Salmonella vac® T showed significantly elevated percentages of CD8+TcR1+ in blood on days 7, 8 and 9, or on day 8 in comparison to control animals. The CD4 to CD8 cell ratio was about 3:1 in infected animals on day 5 of age. In the organs of treated chicks the numbers of CD8+(γδ) and TcR1+(γδ) cells had markedly increased on days 4 and 5 in ceca, 8 and 9 in the bursa and 9 and 12 in the spleen. Moreover, infected or vaccinated birds revealed larger quantities of CD4+ and TcR2+ T cells in ceca on days 4 and 5. As shown by double staining, the TcR1+ cells in the organs of infected animals additionally carried the CD8 antigen.
clusion, immunization of day-old chicks with the attenuated Salmonella live vaccine strain resulted in the same changes in T cell composition as seen after infection with the non-attenuated Salmonella wild-type strain, but at a lower level. The remarkable increase of CD8+TcR1+(γδ) double positive cells in treated birds indicates an important role of this cell sub-population in the immunological defense of chickens against Salmonella exposure.
Keywords :
chicken , Salmonella typhimurium , Monoclonal antibodies , immunohistochemistry