Lymphoid leukosis (LL) was eliminated from 3 inbred lines of White Leghorn chickens that were temporarily kept in isolation. The method of control was based on three elements: 1) From an infected flock we selected hens that produced LL virus-free eggs. Pooled extracts from groups of embryos were tested for vertical virus transmission by the nonproducer cell activation test. 2) Only eggs from dams that did not congenitally shed virus to their embryos were used to produce progeny. The offspring were reared in isolation for 2 months (at which time the age-related resistance against tumor formation had developed sufficiently). 3) The birds were subsequently inoculated im with 10(5) mean tissue culture infective doses of LL viruses of subgroups A and B and transferred to a conventional chicken house. The controlled exposure provided immunity against LL virus infection in a highly infect environment. This procedure resulted in birds a) with no boservable LL, and b) producing LL virus-free eggs. To obtain flocks that had no LL and produced virus-free progeny, the procedure had to be repeated for at least two generations due to the intermittent virus excretion that often occurred.
Groups of White Leghorn chickens were inoculated at 1 day and at 2, 4, 6 and 8 weeks of age respectively with a mixture of leukosis viruses of subgroups A and B. The five infected groups were kept in a filtered air positive pressure house. A sixth group was accommodated separately in a similar house as a control. All birds which died or were removed were subjected to pathohistological examination; diagnosis of lymphoid leukosis was made upon either gross lesions plus microscopical lesions or microscopical lesions only. The incidence of lymphoid leukosis in the infected groups appeared inversely proportional to age of infection, i.e. the mortality due to lymphoid leukosis decreased from 54.3% in the group infected at 1-day-old to 7.4% in the group infected at 8 weeks of age. Prevalence of leukosis in the latter group may be attributed to a small number of chicks already infected vertically with the virus. Congenital transmission of leukosis virus was demonstrated in embryos in the groups infected at 1-day-old, 2, 4 and 6 weeks of age. In the latter group congenital transmission was extremely low; from 214 pooled embryo extracts (1007 embryos) only 2 (0.9%) contained leukosis virus. In the group infected at 8 weeks of age no virus was detected in the embryos. Congenital transmission of leukosis virus appeared to be related to age of infection, i.e. early infection went parallel with a high rate of transmission. The pattern of congenital transmission was erratic and the number of hens shedding leukosis virus continually was small. From the results in this trial it is concluded that both lymphoid leukosis and congenital transmission occur rarely if chickens (born free of leukosis virus) are kept free from infection during the first 6-8 weeks of life and subsequently are injected with a relatively high dose of leukosis virus.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.