Update on the emergence and pathogenesis of necrotic enteritis in broiler chickens


Published: Mar 22, 2018
Keywords:
Emergence pathogenesis necrotic enteritis broiler chickens
V. S. TSIOURIS (Β.Σ. ΤΣΙΟΥΡΗΣ)
I. I. GEORGOPOULOU (Ι. ΓΕΩΡΓΟΠΟΥΛΟΥ)
E. I. PETRIDOU (Ε.Ι. ΠΕΤΡΙΔΟΥ)
Abstract

Necrotic enteritis (NE) is a disease of broiler chickens, which is caused by Clostridiumperfringens type A or C and is characterized by high mortality and severe intestinal lesions. NE is described as a disease of high economical importance which affects health and welfare of broilers and also may pose a threat to public health. Although NE was known as a disease since 1930, it did not cause serious problems to the poultry industry. The emergence of the disease occurred after 1986 in Scandinavia and 2000 in the European Union and was related with the ban of in-feed antimicrobial growth promoter. Furthermore, the ban of meat meal and bone meal from the feed of broiler chickens and their replacement by fishmeal increased further the occurrence of NE. NE breaks the Koch's postulate, which supports that "a disease-causing organism should not be present in healthy individuals", because C perfringens may be detected in high populations in the gut of birds with no visible signs of NE. Moreover, challenge of birds with C perfringens does not \eadperse to the development of the disease. It is very well accepted that NE is a multi-factorial

disease in which a number of co-factors are usually required for the proliferation and toxinogenesis of C. perfringens and manifestation of the disease. Toxin -a, since 2006, has been proposed to be the main virulence factor for NE in poultry. The origin of this assumption seems to lie to observation that crude supernatant from C perfringens type A cultures induced necrotic lesions in broilers. Moreover, the development of NE lesions prevented partially by antibodies against C. perfringens toxin -a. The interpretation of these early studies is not clear, because they used crude supernatant and the assumption was made that the effects were caused by the dominant protein present (i.e. toxin -a). However, many other proteins are also present in the supernatant of

C perfringens cultures. The most convincing evidence, that toxin -a is not essential virulence factor for the pathogenesis of NE, comes from studies using a toxin -a negative mutant (epa mutant) of a C perfringens strain from NE outbreak, which was able to produce characteristic NE lesions. Recently, netB, a novel toxin that is associated with broiler NE, has been described. A netB mutant of C perfringens was unable to cause necrotic lesions in the gut of experimentally infected broilers, but a complemented netB mutant was virulent, like the wild-type strain. However, netB per se, might not be an essential component of virulence factor for the pathogenesis of NE, because not all strains isolated from diseased birds carry the netB gene. The presence of the toxin -β2, although it has been linked with increased incidence of bovine enterotoxaemia, intestinal disorders in human, horses and diarrhea in piglets, does not seem to be involved in the pathogenesis of NE in broiler. Most C. perfringens strains isolated from cases of NE do not carry the gene (cpb2) which is responsible for the production of toxin -β2. The efficacy of antitoxin -a toxoid vaccines, the high concentration of toxin-a at the supernatant of C. perfringens culture and feces of diseased birds, as well as the high titer of antibodies against toxin-a in birds with NE, indicate that toxin -a definitely play a role, major or minor, on the pathogenesis of NE in broilers.

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