Abstract

Infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) is one of the most important poultry pathogens, leading significant economic losses worldwide. IBV is characterised by highly genetic, serotype, and pathotypic variability. Despite extensive immunoprophylaxis strategies, the emergence of new genetic lineages is frequently observed in the field, causing disease control to be more complicated. In the last decade, the spread of variants assigned to the GI-23 lineage of IBV (formerly known as Var2) started from Middle-Eastern countries and reached Europe in the last few years. Recently, the introduction and fast spread of Var2-like IBVs in Poland was reported. In this study, the virulence properties and efficacy of different vaccination programmes were evaluated against infection with the IBV GI-23 strain gammaCoV/Ck/Poland/G052/2016. The pathogenicity of the Var2 isolate was conducted in one-day-old and three-week-old SPF chickens and showed that the course of the disease is age dependent. Seven vaccination programmes using Mass, 793B, QX alone or in combination, and Var2 live vaccines were tested against the GI-23 infectious bronchitis virus challenge. All groups were scored according to the ciliostasis test at 5 days post challenge. Two immunoprophylaxis strategies generated full protection against gammaCoV/Ck/Poland/G052/2016 infection—Var2 and Mass used in one-day-old chickens boosted by a combination of the QX and 793B vaccine (both with a ciliostasis score of 0 and 100% protection).

Highlights

  • Infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) is the longest known coronavirus in the world as it was firstly described almost 90 years ago [1,2]

  • The virus causes a disease of chicken called infectious bronchitis, and affects the reproductive and renal system, which contributes significant economic losses to the poultry industry

  • The aim of this study was the assessment of pathogenicity of previously genetically characterised IBV GI-23 strain gammaCoV/Ck/Poland/G052/2016 in SPF chickens

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) is the longest known coronavirus in the world as it was firstly described almost 90 years ago [1,2]. The virus causes a disease of chicken called infectious bronchitis, and affects the reproductive and renal system, which contributes significant economic losses to the poultry industry. The most variable part of the genome is that the protein encoding the spike protrudes above the surface of the virus (S1 coding region). The spike mediates cell attachment, virus-cell membrane fusion, plays an important role in host cell specificity, and contains epitopes that induce neutralizing antibodies in the chicken [4]. According to the most recent virus taxonomy, IBV belongs to the Gammacoronavirus genus, Igacovirus subgenus, 4.0/)

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