T-independent B-cell effect of agents associated with swine grower-finisher diarrhea

Publication date

2024-04

Authors

Barbosa, Jéssica A.
Yang, Christine T.
Finatto, Arthur N.
Cantarelli, Vinícius S.
Costa, Matheus de O.ISNI 000000049291508X

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Swine dysentery, spirochetal colitis, and salmonellosis are production-limiting enteric diseases of global importance to the swine industry. Despite decades of efforts, mitigation of these diseases still relies on antibiotic therapy. A common knowledge gap among the 3 agents is the early B-cell response to infection in pigs. Thus, this study aimed to characterize the porcine B-cell response to Brachyspira hyodysenteriae, Brachyspira hampsonii (virulent and avirulent strains), Brachyspira pilosicoli, and Salmonella Typhimurium, the agents of the syndromes mentioned above. Immortalized porcine B-cell line derived from a crossbred pig with lymphoma were co-incubated for 8 h with each pathogen, as well as E. coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and a sham-inoculum (n = 3/treatment). B-cell viability following treatments was evaluated using trypan blue, and the expression levels of B-cell activation-related genes was profiled using reverse transcription quantitative PCR. Only S. Typhimurium and LPS led to increased B-cell mortality. B. pilosicoli downregulated B-lymphocyte antigen (CD19), spleen associated tyrosine Kinase (syk), tyrosine-protein kinase (lyn), and Tumour Necrosis Factor alpha (TNF-α), and elicited no change in immunoglobulin-associated beta (CD79b) and swine leukocyte antigen class II (SLA-DRA) expression levels, when compared to the sham-inoculated group. In contrast, all other treatments significantly upregulated CD79b and stimulated responses in other B-cell downstream genes. These findings suggest that B. pilosicoli does not elicit an immediate T-independent B-cell response, nor does it trigger antigen-presenting mechanisms. All other agents activated at least one trigger within the T-independent pathways, as well as peptide antigen presenting mechanisms. Future research is warranted to verify these findings in vivo.

Keywords

Colitis, Gene pathways, Humoral immunomodulation, Salmonellosis, Swine dysentery, Taverne, General Veterinary, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Barbosa, J A, Yang, C T, Finatto, A N, Cantarelli, V S & de Oliveira Costa, M 2024, 'T-independent B-cell effect of agents associated with swine grower-finisher diarrhea', Veterinary Research Communications, vol. 48, no. 2, pp. 991-1001. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11259-023-10257-0