Monitoring of laying capacity, immunoglobulin Y concentration, and antibody titer development in chickens immunized with ricin and botulinum toxins over a two-year period.

D Pauly, M Dorner, X Zhang, A Hlinak, B Dorner, R Schade
Author Information
  1. D Pauly: Robert Koch-Institut, Center for Biological Safety, Microbial Toxins, 13353 Berlin, Germany.

Abstract

One of the key benefits in using chickens for immunization is the high yield of antibodies obtainable. It is known that egg production decreases over time, while animal maintenance costs remain stable. It would, however, be desirable to keep hens as long as possible to obtain maximal amounts of antibodies. To identify a suitable length of time that animals can be kept and to optimize the cost:yield ratio, we monitored the number of eggs laid, the total amount of chicken IgY, and the specific antibody titer from individually prepared eggs over a 2-yr period. The plant toxin ricin and the Clostridium botulinum neurotoxins type A and B were used to immunize 4 chickens. The number of eggs laid in 2 yr was approximately 600 per hen (about 80% of the maximum egg number), yielding about 20 to 40 g of total IgY per hen. A stable antibody titer of 1:100,000 to 1:1,000,000, as measured by ELISA, was obtained following up to 11 injections of 10 to 20 microg of immobilized native toxin. Laying capacities were found to decrease, on average, from 7 eggs/wk at the point of first immunization to 2 eggs/wk after more than 2 yr. In parallel, the yield of total and specific IgY increased over time, so that the antibody recovery remained high, even after prolonged immunization times. Using purified IgY preparations, classical immunological assays such as ELISA and Western blotting were performed. Furthermore, the IgY showed neutralizing capacity when used to block the functional activity of the toxins both in vitro and in vivo. Analysis of the total IgY content over time demonstrated a complex biological oscillation (and the antigen-specific titer), with a shorter time period of around 7 d (circaseptan rhythm). In summary, we successfully immunized chickens with ricin and botulinum neurotoxins and monitored laying capacity, IgY concentration, and specific antibody titer over an extended period of 2 yr.

References

  1. Altern Lab Anim. 2005 Apr;33(2):129-54 [PMID: 16180988]
  2. Pharmacol Ther. 1995 May;66(2):285-300 [PMID: 7667399]
  3. Immunology. 1985 Apr;54(4):755-62 [PMID: 3980047]
  4. J Exp Ther Oncol. 2003 Sep-Oct;3(5):223-60 [PMID: 14641812]
  5. Dev Comp Immunol. 2005;29(2):153-60 [PMID: 15450755]
  6. Chronobiol Int. 1999 Sep;16(5):581-622 [PMID: 10513884]
  7. FASEB J. 1990 May;4(8):2528-32 [PMID: 1970792]
  8. Ther Immunol. 1995 Apr;2(2):59-66 [PMID: 8729877]
  9. Poult Sci. 1993 Oct;72(10):1807-12 [PMID: 8415358]
  10. In Vivo. 1999 Jan-Feb;13(1):107-8 [PMID: 10218142]
  11. Vet Res Commun. 2000 Mar;24(2):103-13 [PMID: 10720096]
  12. Immunol Commun. 1980;9(5):475-93 [PMID: 7429529]
  13. J Immunol Methods. 1988 Jun 13;110(2):225-8 [PMID: 3379312]
  14. JAMA. 2005 Nov 9;294(18):2342-51 [PMID: 16278363]
  15. Drug Discov Today. 2003 Apr 15;8(8):364-71 [PMID: 12681940]
  16. Vaccine. 2005 Apr 27;23(23):3026-32 [PMID: 15811649]
  17. J Immunol Methods. 2001 Jun 1;252(1-2):153-61 [PMID: 11334975]
  18. J Immunol Methods. 1984 Apr 13;69(1):1-7 [PMID: 6715887]
  19. Poult Sci. 1998 Feb;77(2):266-70 [PMID: 9495491]
  20. Vet Immunol Immunopathol. 1993 Jan;35(3-4):321-37 [PMID: 8430499]
  21. Infect Immun. 1998 May;66(5):2018-25 [PMID: 9573084]
  22. Chronobiologia. 1993 Jan-Jun;20(1-2):87-115 [PMID: 8354104]
  23. Infect Immun. 2006 Jun;74(6):3463-70 [PMID: 16714577]
  24. Ups J Med Sci. 2001;106(2):99-110 [PMID: 11888073]
  25. JAMA. 2001 Feb 28;285(8):1059-70 [PMID: 11209178]
  26. Toxicon. 2002 Jul;40(7):857-61 [PMID: 12076638]
  27. J Med Food. 2002 Fall;5(3):159-69 [PMID: 12495588]
  28. Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol. 2004;44:167-93 [PMID: 14744243]
  29. Toxicol Rev. 2003;22(1):53-64 [PMID: 14579547]
  30. Infect Immun. 2002 May;70(5):2278-81 [PMID: 11953360]
  31. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2003 Jun;35(6):433-40 [PMID: 12746939]
  32. J Biol Chem. 1974 Feb 10;249(3):803-10 [PMID: 4811904]
  33. Toxicol Rev. 2003;22(1):65-70 [PMID: 14579548]
  34. Rev Infect Dis. 1979 Jul-Aug;1(4):701-19 [PMID: 399378]

MeSH Term

Animals
Botulinum Toxins
Chickens
Eggs
Female
Immunization
Immunoglobulins
Immunotoxins
Oviposition
Ricin

Chemicals

IgY
Immunoglobulins
Immunotoxins
Ricin
Botulinum Toxins

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0IgYtimeantibodytiterchickenstotalperiod2immunizationnumbereggsspecificricinbotulinumyr000capacityhighyieldantibodieseggstablemonitoredlaidtoxinneurotoxinsusedperhen20ELISA7eggs/wktoxinsimmunizedlayingconcentrationOnekeybenefitsusingobtainableknownproductiondecreasesanimalmaintenancecostsremainhoweverdesirablekeephenslongpossibleobtainmaximalamountsidentifysuitablelengthanimalscankeptoptimizecost:yieldratioamountchickenindividuallyprepared2-yrplantClostridiumtypeBimmunize4approximately60080%maximumyielding40g1:1001:1measuredobtainedfollowing11injections10microgimmobilizednativeLayingcapacitiesfounddecreaseaveragepointfirstparallelincreasedrecoveryremainedevenprolongedtimesUsingpurifiedpreparationsclassicalimmunologicalassaysWesternblottingperformedFurthermoreshowedneutralizingblockfunctionalactivityvitrovivoAnalysiscontentdemonstratedcomplexbiologicaloscillationantigen-specificshorterarounddcircaseptanrhythmsummarysuccessfullyextendedMonitoringimmunoglobulinYdevelopmenttwo-year

Similar Articles

Cited By