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In vivo typing of Escherichia coli obtained from laying chickens with the E. coli peritonitis syndrome.

W J M LandmanG J ButerRemco DijkmanJ H H van Eck
Published in: Avian pathology : journal of the W.V.P.A (2021)
Fourteen genetically different chicken Escherichia coli strains were biotyped in hens to examine if any E. coli strain at high dose can induce the E. coli peritonitis syndrome (EPS). Moreover, biotyping was performed in embryos and the median lethal dose (LD50) of three strains was determined in hens. Nine strains were obtained from femur marrow and one strain from caecum of hens that had died from EPS. One strain originated from the inflamed pericardium of a broiler and three strains from the cloaca of specified pathogen-free (SPF) broiler breeders. Strains were inoculated intratracheally into separate groups of 32 productive SPF White Leghorn (WL) hens at a dose of 7.8-9.2 log10 colony forming units (CFU) per hen and into the allantoic cavity of separate groups of 20 SPF WL embryos incubated during 14 days in a dose of 4.2-4.6 log10 CFU per embryo. The embryo test was replicated. Bone marrow and pericardium strains induced EPS, the other strains did not. Based on mortality in hens, EPS-inducing strains could be classified as very virulent (59-100% mortality), moderately virulent (38% mortality) and low virulent (6% mortality). In productive SPF WL hens, the LD50 of three very virulent strains ranged from <2.7 to 5.3 log10 CFU. Virulent and avirulent strains killed 60-95% and 0-30% of embryos, respectively. The embryo lethality test, which showed good reproducibility, did not discriminate within virulent strains, but can nevertheless be considered as a useful alternative for biotyping E. coli in productive hens.RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTSEven at high doses, no E. coli strain could induce EPS.Substantial differences in virulence exist within very virulent E. coli strains.The embryo lethality test is a useful alternative for biotyping E. coli in laying hens.Broiler colibacillosis may represent a source of EPS strains for layers and vice versa.
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