How to translate text using browser tools
1 March 2012 Natural Infection and Transmission of a Retrovirus Closely Related to Myeloblastosis-Associated Virus Type 1 in Egg-Type Chickens
Guillermo Zavala, Sunny Cheng, Taylor Barbosa
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Myeloblastosis-associated virus type 1 (MAV-1) is an exogenous avian retrovirus with oncogenic potential. MAV-1 was detected in young chicks hatching from eggs produced by an experimental genetic line of egg-type chickens. Transmissibility of MAV-1 had not been documented previously. This investigation was intended to partially characterize the virus involved and to study its transmissibility and oncogenicity in naturally and contact-infected chickens. Commercially produced white and brown layer pullets free of exogenous avian leukosis viruses were commingled at hatch with naturally MAV-1–infected chickens. The original MAV-1–infected chickens were discarded after approximately 8 wk, and the contact-exposed chickens were maintained in isolation for 36 wk. Young specific-pathogen-free (SPF) single comb white leghorn chickens were added to the group to study possible horizontal transmission of MAV-1 in young chickens. Upon weekly virus isolation attempts, MAV-1 was readily isolated from the contact-exposed white layers but not from the brown layers between 36 and 53 wk of age (18 wk in total). Three-week-old SPF chickens were readily infected with MAV-1 by contact as early as 1 wk postexposure. Throughout 22 hatches derived from the white and brown MAV-1–contact-exposed layers (between 36 and 53 wk of age), MAV-1 was frequently detected in the white layer progeny, whereas the virus was seldom isolated from the progeny produced by the brown layers during the same 18-wk period. MAV-1 induced a persistent infection in some of the SPF chickens that were exposed by contact at 3 wk of age. Gross tumors were not detected in any of the originally infected experimental chickens at 8 wk of age, in the contact-exposed brown or white layers at the termination of the study at 53 wks of age, or in the contact-exposed SPF chickens at the end of the study at 12 wk of age. Exogenous avian leukosis-related viruses may still be detected in egg-type chickens, emphasizing the importance of thorough screening before incorporation of experimental genetic material into commercial genetic lines of egg-type chickens.

American Association of Avian Pathologists
Guillermo Zavala, Sunny Cheng, and Taylor Barbosa "Natural Infection and Transmission of a Retrovirus Closely Related to Myeloblastosis-Associated Virus Type 1 in Egg-Type Chickens," Avian Diseases 56(1), 7-14, (1 March 2012). https://doi.org/10.1637/9755-040811-Reg.1
Received: 11 April 2011; Accepted: 1 August 2011; Published: 1 March 2012
KEYWORDS
avian retrovirus
egg-type chickens
myeloblastosis-associated virus type 1
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top