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The impact of the experimental route of challenge on the host responses and pathogenesis of the Canadian Delmarva (DMV/1639) infectious bronchitis virus infection in laying chickens.

Infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) infection can be associated with respiratory, renal, and/or reproductive diseases in chickens. Under natural conditions, conjunctiva, mucosa of upper respiratory tract, and cloaca are the main routes of IBV entry. Experimentally, the study of IBV infection involved various routes of inoculation. This study investigated the impact of adding the trachea as a potential route of viral entry to the oculo-nasal infection on the host responses, pathogenicity, and tissue tropism of the Canadian IBV Delmarva (DMV/1639) strain in laying chickens. Specific-pathogen-free laying chickens were divided into three experimental groups: control group (Con group), oculo-nasal challenged group (ON group), and oculo-nasal/intratracheal challenged group (ON/IT group); all groups were observed for 12 days post-infection (dpi). The clinical signs and reduction in egg production in the ON/IT group started slightly earlier compared to the ON group. At 12 dpi, the gross lesions in the ON/IT group were confined to the ovary, while the ON group showed regressed ovary and atrophied oviduct. Only the ON group showed significantly higher microscopic lesion scores in the lung, kidney, magnum, and uterus compared to the control group at 12 dpi. The oviduct tissues of the ON group showed a significant increase in B cells infiltration compared to ON/IT and control groups. The viral shedding (detected by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR)), tissue tropism (detected either by qRT-PCR or immunohistochemistry (IHC)), T/natural killer cells infiltration in reproductive tract (detected by IHC), and antibody-mediated immune responses (measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) showed similar patterns in the ON and ON/IT groups.

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