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Cited 35 time in webofscience Cited 40 time in scopus
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Immune effects of dietary anethole on Eimeria acervulina infectionopen access

Authors
Kim, Duk KyungLillehoj, Hyun S.Lee, Sung HyenJang, Seung IkPark, Myeong SeonMin, WongiLillehoj, Erik P.Bravo, David
Issue Date
Oct-2013
Publisher
POULTRY SCIENCE ASSOC INC
Keywords
anethole; Eimeria acervulina; chicken; immunity; microarray
Citation
POULTRY SCIENCE, v.92, no.10, pp 2625 - 2634
Pages
10
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume
92
Number
10
Start Page
2625
End Page
2634
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/20436
DOI
10.3382/ps.2013-03092
ISSN
0032-5791
1525-3171
Abstract
The effects of anethole on in vitro and in vivo parameters of chicken immunity during experimental avian coccidiosis were evaluated. Anethole reduced the viability of invasive Eimeria acervulina sporozoites after 2 or 4 h of treatment in vitro by 45 and 42%, respectively, and stimulated 6.0-fold greater chicken spleen cell proliferation compared with controls. Broiler chickens continuously fed from hatch with an anethole-supplemented diet and orally challenged with live E. acervulina oocysts showed enhanced BW gain, decreased fecal oocyst excretion, and greater E. acervulina profilin antibody responses compared with infected chickens given an unsupplemented standard diet. The levels of transcripts encoding the immune mediators IL6, IL8, IL10, and tumor necrosis factor ligand superfamily member 15 (TNFSF15) in intestinal lymphocytes were increased in E. acervulina-infected chickens fed the anethole-containing diet compared with untreated controls. Global gene expression analysis by microarray hybridization identified 1,810 transcripts (677 upregulated, 1,133 downregulated) whose levels were significantly altered in intestinal lymphocytes of anethole-fed birds compared with unsupplemented controls. From this transcriptome, 576 corresponding genes were identified. The most significant biological function associated with these genes was "Inflammatory Response" in the "Disease and Disorders" category. This new information documents the immunologic and genomic changes that occur in chickens following anethole dietary supplementation that may be relevant to host protective immune response to avian coccidiosis.
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