Abstract

The effect of vitamin A deficiency on the activity of peritoneal macrophages (PM) was investigated in noninfected and Newcastle disease virus (NDV)-infected chickens. Day-old chickens with limited vitamin A reserves were fed diets containing either marginal (120 retinol equivalents (RE)/kg) or adequate (1200 RE/kg) levels of vitamin A. At 4 weeks of age, half of the chickens in each group were infected with the La Sota strain of NDV and PM were isolated 11 or 12 days later. These were used for counting the uptake of fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled yeast cells as an indicator of phagocytic activity and for measuring the reduction of nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT), which provides an estimate of oxygen-dependent killing of microorganisms. Vitamin A deficiency impaired NBT reduction and, to a lesser extent, phagocytosis in both infected and noninfected chickens. NDV infection increased phagocytosis and NBT reduction in normal and, to a lesser extent, in vitamin A-deficient chickens.

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