Evaluation of Viral-Induced Stress by Quantitating Corticosterone in Feathers of Virus-Infected Specific Pathogen-Free Chicks

SUMMARY: Physiological stress is known to promote economic losses by causing immunosuppression. Various factors induce stress, including non-optimal management and infection with various pathogens. The concentration of the stress hormone, corticosterone, is indicative of stress in birds. However, it...

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Main Authors: I. Davidson, A. Altory-Natour, R. Haddas, S. Nagar, R. Meir, N. Avital-Cohen, I. Rozenboim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-03-01
Series:Journal of Applied Poultry Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1056617120300118
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spelling doaj-88d9a97d7a3b42539dccd29b2a8d9acf2020-11-25T03:42:57ZengElsevierJournal of Applied Poultry Research1056-61712020-03-012914863Evaluation of Viral-Induced Stress by Quantitating Corticosterone in Feathers of Virus-Infected Specific Pathogen-Free ChicksI. Davidson0A. Altory-Natour1R. Haddas2S. Nagar3R. Meir4N. Avital-Cohen5I. Rozenboim6Division of Avian Diseases, Kimron Veterinary Institute, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel; Corresponding authorDivision of Avian Diseases, Kimron Veterinary Institute, Bet Dagan 50250, IsraelDivision of Avian Diseases, Kimron Veterinary Institute, Bet Dagan 50250, IsraelVeterinary Services, 50250, IsraelRishon Lezion 50250, IsraelDepartment of Animal Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot 761001, IsraelDepartment of Animal Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot 761001, IsraelSUMMARY: Physiological stress is known to promote economic losses by causing immunosuppression. Various factors induce stress, including non-optimal management and infection with various pathogens. The concentration of the stress hormone, corticosterone, is indicative of stress in birds. However, its measurement is difficult due to its elevation caused by catching, handling, bleeding, short half-life in the blood, and short secretion period in feces. We describe a novel method to assess corticosterone concentration by sampling feathers. The viruses studied were 2 immunosuppressive viruses, Marek's disease virus and chicken anemia virus, the respiratory viruses, influenza virus H9N2, Newcastle disease virus, and Infectious bronchitis virus. The study contributes novelty as virus-induced stress by feather examination was described sporadically in chickens previously, and feathers were used to detect corticosterone mainly in dead wild and captive birds. Also, the development of extraction method from feathers is novel by using PBS instead of methanol, and by preparing the feather homogenate with steroid displacement reagent.The study findings revealed that virus infections increased the corticosterone concentrations in feather tips to various extents, from 2× to 10× fold, demonstrating that birds endure stress in addition to the clinical and pathological effects induced by the virus infections.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1056617120300118viral-induced stresscorticosteronefeathersELISAvirus infectionSPF chickens
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author I. Davidson
A. Altory-Natour
R. Haddas
S. Nagar
R. Meir
N. Avital-Cohen
I. Rozenboim
spellingShingle I. Davidson
A. Altory-Natour
R. Haddas
S. Nagar
R. Meir
N. Avital-Cohen
I. Rozenboim
Evaluation of Viral-Induced Stress by Quantitating Corticosterone in Feathers of Virus-Infected Specific Pathogen-Free Chicks
Journal of Applied Poultry Research
viral-induced stress
corticosterone
feathers
ELISA
virus infection
SPF chickens
author_facet I. Davidson
A. Altory-Natour
R. Haddas
S. Nagar
R. Meir
N. Avital-Cohen
I. Rozenboim
author_sort I. Davidson
title Evaluation of Viral-Induced Stress by Quantitating Corticosterone in Feathers of Virus-Infected Specific Pathogen-Free Chicks
title_short Evaluation of Viral-Induced Stress by Quantitating Corticosterone in Feathers of Virus-Infected Specific Pathogen-Free Chicks
title_full Evaluation of Viral-Induced Stress by Quantitating Corticosterone in Feathers of Virus-Infected Specific Pathogen-Free Chicks
title_fullStr Evaluation of Viral-Induced Stress by Quantitating Corticosterone in Feathers of Virus-Infected Specific Pathogen-Free Chicks
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Viral-Induced Stress by Quantitating Corticosterone in Feathers of Virus-Infected Specific Pathogen-Free Chicks
title_sort evaluation of viral-induced stress by quantitating corticosterone in feathers of virus-infected specific pathogen-free chicks
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Applied Poultry Research
issn 1056-6171
publishDate 2020-03-01
description SUMMARY: Physiological stress is known to promote economic losses by causing immunosuppression. Various factors induce stress, including non-optimal management and infection with various pathogens. The concentration of the stress hormone, corticosterone, is indicative of stress in birds. However, its measurement is difficult due to its elevation caused by catching, handling, bleeding, short half-life in the blood, and short secretion period in feces. We describe a novel method to assess corticosterone concentration by sampling feathers. The viruses studied were 2 immunosuppressive viruses, Marek's disease virus and chicken anemia virus, the respiratory viruses, influenza virus H9N2, Newcastle disease virus, and Infectious bronchitis virus. The study contributes novelty as virus-induced stress by feather examination was described sporadically in chickens previously, and feathers were used to detect corticosterone mainly in dead wild and captive birds. Also, the development of extraction method from feathers is novel by using PBS instead of methanol, and by preparing the feather homogenate with steroid displacement reagent.The study findings revealed that virus infections increased the corticosterone concentrations in feather tips to various extents, from 2× to 10× fold, demonstrating that birds endure stress in addition to the clinical and pathological effects induced by the virus infections.
topic viral-induced stress
corticosterone
feathers
ELISA
virus infection
SPF chickens
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1056617120300118
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