Jw. Arnold et Ps. Holt, CYTOTOXICITY IN CHICKEN ALIMENTARY SECRETIONS AS MEASURED BY A DERIVATIVE OF THE TUMOR-NECROSIS-FACTOR ASSAY, Poultry science, 75(3), 1996, pp. 329-334
The host immune response to enteric bacterial infections, including sa
lmonellosis, results in inflammatory cells entering the intestine near
the site of infection. These cells produce factors, such as cytokines
, that are cytotoxic to bacteria-infected cells, resulting in loss of
host cells. Ln this study, an assay was developed, based on the tumor
necrosis factor (TNF) assay, that measured the cytotoxic activity in a
limentary secretions from chickens during a Salmonella enteritidis (SE
) infection. Secretions were collected by pilocarpine-induced evacuati
on from the alimentary tract and clarified by centrifugation. Activity
was assessed by the cytotoxic effect of secretions on chicken embryo
fibroblasts as target cells. Cytotoxic activity from SE-infected hens
was measured at intervals during the first 24 h following infection an
d daily for the next 10 d. The level of activity varied between hens b
ut was maximal in secretions obtained at 24 h and 10 d after SE infect
ion. Maximal levels of cytotoxic activity in alimentary secretions fro
m hens occurred in response to a dose of 5 x 10(8) cfu/mL of SE. The c
ytotoxicity in secretions from SE-exposed hens that were deprived of f
eed was greater than those from control SE-exposed hens by more than f
ivefold.