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Avian immunosuppressive diseases and immune evasion
Schat, K.A. ✉
;
Skinner, M.A.
English Chapter (Chapter in Book) Scientific
Published:
Kasper B. Avian Immunology. (2022) ISBN:9780128187081
pp. 387-417
Identifiers
MTMT: 32803385
DOI:
10.1016/B978-0-12-818708-1.00018-X
Scopus:
85126156708
Subclinical immunosuppression in chickens is an important but often underestimated factor in the subsequent development of clinical disease. Immunosuppression can be caused by pathogens such as chicken infectious anemia virus, infectious bursal disease virus, reovirus, and some retroviruses (e.g., reticuloendotheliosis virus). Mycotoxins and stress, often caused by poor management practices, can also cause immunosuppression. The effects on the innate and acquired immune responses and the mechanisms by which mycotoxins, stress, and infectious agents cause immunosuppression are discussed. Immunoevasion is a common ploy by which viruses neutralize or evade immune responses. DNA viruses such as herpesvirus and poxvirus have multiple genes, some of them host-derived, which interfere with effective innate or acquired immune responses. RNA viruses may escape acquired humoral and cellular immune responses by mutations in protective antigenic epitopes (e.g., avian influenza viruses), while accessory nonstructural proteins or multifunctional structural proteins interfere with the interferon system (e.g., Newcastle disease virus). © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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2025-04-16 21:19
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Citation styles:
IEEE
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