Abstract :
Outdoor or organic farming demands robust chickens that are able to combat common infections before they spread to the
flock. Priming the immune system of the chickens early in life with micro-organisms that they will encounter later in life
prepares chickens to a life in environments where they are subjected to a more natural level of infection pressure. Also,
exposure to non-infectious stressful situations may prepare the immune system to combat infectious challenges. The present
study investigated whether the immune system could be primed by applying small doses of infective material to the chicken
flock or by exposure to short-term non-infectious stimulation, and whether the effect of those stimuli would depend on the
genetic material chosen. The effect of the stimulations was examined on selected immunological variables in two chicken
strains, using small amounts of manure and litter from other chickens or short-term heat stress, respectively. After 6 weeks
of treatment, all chickens were subjected to an Escherichia coli infection and followed for another 3 weeks. Measures of
body weight gain, chicken mannan-binding lectin (cMBL), percentage of CD41 and MHCII1 lymphocytes, mean fluorescence
intensity (m.f.i.) of CD4 on CD41 cells and MHCII on MHCII1 cells and antibody titres to E. coli were taken. In conclusion,
the chickens redistribute lymphocyte populations in peripheral blood in response to potentially infectious agents as well as to
stressful non-infectious treatments. Responses to stress situations were dependent on the frequencies of stress exposures and
on the chicken breed. This may reflect the superiority of one breed over another in adapting to treatments or in discriminating
whether a treatment is harmless or dangerous. However, the differences did not influence the disease resistance to infection
with a mixture of E. coli O2, O11 and O78 in the present study.
Keywords :
chickens , E. coli , heatstress , immune response