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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Competition between two virulent Marek's disease virus strains in vivo

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Pages 267-275 | Received 26 Sep 2011, Accepted 03 Jan 2012, Published online: 18 Jun 2012
 

Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated the presence of multiple strains of Marek's disease virus simultaneously circulating within poultry flocks, leading to the assumption that individual birds are repeatedly exposed to a variety of virus strains in their lifetime. Virus competition within individual birds may be an important factor that influences the outcome of co-infection under field conditions, including the potential outcome of emergence or evolution of more virulent strains. A series of experiments was designed to evaluate virus competition within chickens following simultaneous challenge with two virulent serotype 1 Marek's disease virus strains, using either pathogenically similar (rMd5 and rMd5/pp38CVI) or dissimilar (JM/102W and rMd5/pp38CVI) virus pairs. Bursa of Fabricius, feather follicle epithelium, spleen, and tumour samples were collected at multiple time points to determine the frequency and distribution of each virus present using pyrosequencing, immunohistochemistry and virus isolation. In the similar pair, rMd5 appeared to have a competitive advantage over rMd5/pp38CVI, which in turn had a competitive advantage over the less virulent JM/102W in the dissimilar virus pair. Dominance of one strain over the other was not absolute for either virus pair, as the subordinate virus was rarely eliminated. Interestingly, competition between two viruses with either pair rarely ended in a draw. Further work is needed to identify factors that influence virus-specific dominance to better understand what characteristics favour emergence of one strain in chicken populations at the expense of other strains.

Acknowledgements

Thank you to all of the staff at the USDA Avian Disease and Oncology Laboratory who helped with sampling or in necropsy at any given time during the project, including Barry Coulson, Tom Goodwill, Noah Koller, Jody Mays, Lonnie Milam, Laurie Molitor, Melanie Flesberg, and Evelyn Young. Thank you to Matti Kiupel and Tom Wood at MSU DCPAH who graciously allowed us to use their equipment for automated immunohistochemistry staining.

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