AI Article Synopsis

  • LPAIVs from wild birds can mutate into HPAIVs when they infect poultry, leading to high mortality rates and significant economic losses.
  • The study investigates how various LPAIV H7 strains affect gene expression in chickens, despite using controlled experimental conditions.
  • Results show variability in gene expression in response to different LPAIV strains, suggesting that host factors may play a role in the virus's pathogenicity evolution.

Article Abstract

Once low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses (LPAIVs) of the H5 and H7 subtypes from wild birds enter into poultry species, there is the possibility of them mutating into highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAIVs), resulting in severe epizootics with up to 100% mortality. This mutation from a LPAIV to HPAIV strain is the main cause of an AIV's major economic impact on poultry production. Although AIVs are inextricably linked to their hosts in their evolutionary history, the contribution of host-related factors in the emergence of HPAI viruses has only been marginally explored so far. In this study, transcriptomic sequencing of tracheal tissue from chickens infected with four distinct LP H7 viruses, characterized by a different history of pathogenicity evolution in the field, was implemented. Despite the inoculation of a normalized infectious dose of viruses belonging to the same subtype (H7) and pathotype (LPAI), the use of animals of the same age, sex and species as well as the identification of a comparable viral load in the target samples, the analyses revealed a heterogeneity in the gene expression profile in response to infection with each of the H7 viruses administered.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8620788PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v13112323DOI Listing

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