Barri, Adriana (2005-02). Effects of Cytosine-phosphate-Guanosine Oligodeoxynucleotides (CpG-ODN) on vaccination and immunization of neonatal chickens. Master's Thesis. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • The objective of this investigation was to evaluate the effects of administering CpG-ODN to commercial strain chickens as a potential adjuvant to vaccination against Salmonella, Eimeria spp., and Newcastle disease virus, or immunization to bovine serum albumin (BSA). During Experiment 1, which evaluated the dual application of CpG-ODN and a Newcastle disease virus vaccine, in the first of three replicate trials, on day 28 of the experiment, animals in the Vaccine + CpG 1& 14 experimental group were observed to have the highest levels of (p<0.05) anti-NDV IgG in serum. These levels were elevated above levels in animals from all other experimental groups. This suggestion for an adjuvant effect associated with CpG-ODN administration was not supported in the remaining two trials of experiment 1. Experiment 2 evaluated the potential for CpG-ODN to adjuvant a commercial live oocyst coccidial vaccine when applied by an oral route to neonatal broiler chickens. Overall, when body weight gain during challenge, development of intestinal lesions, and anti-Eimeria IgG levels were evaluated, vaccine administration alone was demonstrated to provide the best measure of protection among animals in all experimental groups, including those receiving either CpG-ODN or Non CpG-ODN. Experiment 3 investigated the simultaneous administration of CpG-ODN or Non-CpG ODN and a commercially acquired Salmonella typhimurium vaccine to SCWL chickens. Similar to experiments 1 and 2, antigen specific IgG responses in serum and indices of protection against field strain Salmonella challenge were variable and inconsistent. Anti-BSA IgG levels were compared in broiler and SCWL chickens immunized against BSA by a drinking water route of administration alone, or in combination with two different concentrations of CpG-ODN or Non CpG-ODN in experiment 4. The only observation where CpG-ODN and BSA co-administration resulted in anti-BSA IgG levels that were elevated above BSA alone immunized chickens was measured in broilers at day 19 post-final immunization. Taken together, given the variable results reported in this investigation related to the co-administration of ODN and vaccine or protein antigen, these data are largely inconclusive for suggesting that CpG-ODN can effectively adjuvant humoral immune responses in commercial strain chickens.

publication date

  • February 2005