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Healthy Animals 51

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Issue 51, October 2012
About this Newsletter

New Technology Detects and Deters Poultry Diseases

A healthy pig rests its snout on the back of another pig.

Research Briefs

Roundworms Give Termites Headaches. Nematodes or roundworms that invade the brains of termites may offer an alternative method to controlling them.

Testing Meat for Tenderness and Lasting Color. A noninvasive system that predicts tenderness in beef can now identify tender pork as well as color stability in meat.

A Parasite Expedition Waits at NAL. Treasures of parasite photos, drawings, lantern slides, research notes, reports and correspondence offer adventure at the National Agricultural Library.

Using Genetics to Fight Cotton Pest. Scientists have developed genetic markers for the genes associated with resistance to root-knot nematode in upland cotton.

Pathogens such as viruses and parasites continue to cause economic hardship for the poultry industry. Enteric or intestinal diseases such as runting-stunting syndrome, poult enteritis mortality syndrome, and poult enteritis complex are a major concern of poultry producers worldwide.

The same is true for coccidiosis, a devastating disease caused by intestinal parasites. Coccidiosis costs the poultry industry more than $600 million annually in the United States and $3 billion worldwide.

Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists are finding new ways to identify pathogens and are developing innovative methods to control them. In Georgia, they are using a new molecular technology to detect viruses in poultry. In Maryland, researchers are developing hyperimmune egg yolk antibodies to boost the immune system of young chicks against infectious diseases.

Finding Novel Viruses in the Mix

At the ARS Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory (SEPRL) in Athens, Ga., scientists have stepped up their efforts in fighting diseases that cause diarrhea, decreased weight and mortality in poultry. A number of viruses are believed to be responsible for intestinal diseases, but a single agent has not been identified.

A powerful technology called metagenomics is being used by microbiologist Michael Day and research leader Laszlo Zsak at SEPRL's Endemic Poultry Viral Diseases Research Unit to confirm and unearth viruses. The technique is different than traditional sequencing that characterizes genes in a single organism. Metagenomics detects the nucleic acid-RNA and DNA-of thousands of organisms in an entire community.

Collaborating with veterinarians and poultry producers, Day and Zsak collected intestinal samples from several turkey flocks affected by enteric disease. They then used metagenomics to uncover vast amounts of viruses from the samples.

Microbiologist Michael Day examining the validation results of a new molecular diagnostic assay for a turkey picobirnavirus.
Microbiologist Michael Day examines the validation results of a new molecular diagnostic assay for a turkey picobirnavirus. Day used a metagenomic approach to detect the novel picobirnavirus RNA in turkeys experiencing enteric (intestinal) disease.

An analysis of the sample showed that the intestinal virus metagenome contained thousands of pieces of nucleic acid representing many groups of previously known and unknown turkey viruses. Scientists confirmed common avian viruses such as rotavirus, astrovirus and reovirus. They also detected many RNA viruses, such as members of the Picornaviridae family.

"We discovered an abundance of previously unknown turkey viruses like picobirnavirus, which is a small, double-stranded RNA virus implicated in enteric disease in other agricultural animals," Day says. "In addition, we identified a calicivirus, which is associated with human enteric diseases, in poultry."

By using metagenomics, scientists were able to generate and continue to analyze additional data from the samples. They discovered a new bacteriophage that had never been described in turkey intestinal samples.

"The bacteriophage is called phiCA82," Zsak says. "It belongs to a group known as microphages and is the type of virus that naturally kills bacteria. Phages are important because they can potentially be used as alternatives to antibiotics and as weapons against multi-drug-resistant pathogens."

Future studies will be done to determine if phages like this one actually kill the bacteria they infect, Zsak says. Once this process is identified, scientists can design identical ways to kill dangerous pathogens.

Metagenomics also was used to produce the first in-depth analysis of the full-length genome sequence of a novel chicken parvovirus. Scientists then developed a PCR assay to detect the virus in turkeys and chickens. They used the highly effective test to detect parvoviruses in enteric samples collected from commercial poultry flocks in different U.S. regions.

A group of chicks.
Chicks can be fed antibodies extracted from hyperimmune egg yolks from pathogen-free hens as an antibiotic-free way to protect them from coccidiosis while potentially helping to fight the development of drug-resistant strains.

"The beauty of metagenomics is that viruses do not have to be isolated or propagated. Small pieces of nucleic acid can be sequenced from samples taken from mixed communities," Day says. "The main goal is to use this technology to develop diagnostic tools, identify effective new treatments and improve management to help control costly animal and plant diseases."

"Egging On" Poultry Diseases

A different type of technology is being used to prevent coccidiosis and other enteric diseases in poultry at the ARS Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (BARC) in Beltsville, Md.

Avian immunologist Hyun Lillehoj partnered with scientists at universities and industry to develop a passive immunization strategy to control poultry diseases. The novel, antibiotic-free technology uses hyperimmune egg yolk antibodies to enhance the immune capability of newly hatched chicks.

"By controlling coccidiosis, you're also reducing the impact of this disease on other enteric pathogens," says Lillehoj, who works in BARC's Animal Parasitic Diseases Laboratory. "For example, this method could be used to control the bacterial pathogens that cause necrotic enteritis, a prevalent gut disease of poultry."

Live vaccinations and good management practices help reduce the spread of disease in poultry. The new method offers producers an antibiotic-free alternative in controlling drug-resistant strains of the disease.

A flock of turkeys.
In studies of intestinal samples from turkeys with enteric diseases, ARS scientists have discovered a new virus that may have future antimicrobial applications.

"The technology is simple," Lillehoj says. "Antibodies are extracted from yolks of eggs from pathogen-free birds that have been hyperimmunized."

These birds possess strong immunity due to an abundance of antibodies against the pathogen-causing intestinal disease, she explains. The egg yolk is spray-dried, mixed with feed and given to chicks that have no immune protection right after hatching.

In one experiment, one-day-old chicks were given feed mixed with spray-dried egg yolk powder prepared from hyperimmunized hens. The chicks were then challenged with a coccidia infection.

Typically, birds infected with coccidiosis are unable to absorb nutrients from food or gain weight. The chicks that received the hyperimmune egg yolk antibodies had increased body weight, significantly reduced gut lesions than those that did not receive the treatment.

Thanks to this research, a product is now available from a commercial company to help control coccidiosis. Similar approaches are being applied to control other poultry enteric diseases.

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For more information about animal disease research, contact Cyril Gay or Eileen Thacker, co-leaders of ARS National Program #103, Animal Health.


About This Newsletter

ARS Animal Health Research Laboratories

Healthy Animals Archive

     
Last Modified: 11/02/2012
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