Abstract
Differences in the relative pathogenicity of variant (1084 E and GLS) and standard (Edgar and STC) infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) strains were observed after propagation in the bursa of Fabricius, embryos, or cell cultures. Bursa-derived IBDV induced the most severe lesions in the bursa of Fabricius when compared with strains propagated in embryos or cell cultures. Embryo-derived IBDV induced moderate gross bursal lesions, whereas cell culture-derived IBDV did not damage the bursa grossly. A high frequency of virus re-isolations was obtained from bursal, spleen, and thymic samples collected from birds inoculated with bursa-derived or embryo-derived IBDV. Virus re-isolation occurred much less frequently from birds inoculated with cell culture-adapted IBDV. Serological evaluations demonstrated that bursa-derived IBDV strains induced a higher neutralizing antibody response than did embryo-derived or cell culture-derived strains. These results document that the relative pathogenicity and immunogenicity of IBDV is reduced following propagation in embryos or cell cultures.
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