Abstract

Reovirus 81-176 was inoculated subcutaneously into day-old specific-pathogen-free leghorns and evaluated for its effects on the immune system over a 3-week period. Structural criteria included organ weights of the bursa of Fabricius (BF) and spleen (SP), scoring of histological lesions in the BF, SP, and thymus, and hematological analyses of the circulating leukocytes. Alterations in the functional capacity of the immune system were measured using the graft-versus-host reaction, the response of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) to mitogens, the ability of circulating monocytes to phagocytize latex beads, and the serological responses to Newcastle disease virus, sheep red blood cells, and Brucella abortus antigens. For comparison, infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) was similarly evaluated by most of the same tests. Structurally, reovirus 81-176 altered BF and SP organ weights, the total numbers of white blood cells in circulation, and the degree of follicular atrophy in the BF. Functionally, reovirus inoculation reduced both the response of PBLs to the phytohemagglutinin-P stimulation and monocyte uptake of latex beads. According to the protocols used here, no significant alteration in B-cell function could be detected in reovirus-infected chicks. With the exception of leukocyte hematology, IBDV-infected chicks had significantly altered responses in all tests used. By way of comparison, the effects of IBDV were more persistent and pronounced than were those seen with reovirus. The graft-versus-host reaction indicated an elevated and/or uninhibited response of T-cells in the blood of IBDV-infected chicks.

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