logo
Loading...
Genomic tailoring of autogenous poultry vaccines to reduce *Campylobacter* from farm to fork
Veterinary Sciencenpj Vaccines

Genomic tailoring of autogenous poultry vaccines to reduce *Campylobacter* from farm to fork

J. K. Calland, M. E. Pesonen, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Jessica K. Calland and colleagues reveals a promising whole-cell autogenous vaccine that significantly reshapes the Campylobacter population in poultry, dramatically reducing food safety risks. The study demonstrates a 50% decrease in extra-intestinal survival genes in offspring, potentially transforming how we tackle food-borne gastroenteritis linked to poultry. Discover how this innovative approach brings us closer to safer poultry production.... show more
Abstract
Campylobacter is a leading cause of food-borne gastroenteritis worldwide, linked to the consumption of contaminated poultry meat. Targeting this pathogen at source, vaccines for poultry can provide short-term caecal reductions in Campylobacter numbers in the chicken intestine. However, this approach is unlikely to reduce Campylobacter in the food chain or human incidence. This is likely as vaccines typically target only a subset of the high genomic strain diversity circulating among chicken flocks, and rapid evolution diminishes vaccine efficacy over time. To address this, we used a genomic approach to develop a whole-cell autogenous vaccine targeting isolates harbouring genes linked to survival outside of the host. We hyper-immunised a whole major UK breeder farm to passively target offspring colonisation using maternally-derived antibody. Monitoring progeny, broiler flocks revealed a near-complete shift in the post-vaccination Campylobacter population with an ~50% reduction in isolates harbouring extra-intestinal survival genes and a significant reduction of Campylobacter cells surviving on the surface of meat. Based on these findings, we developed a logistic regression model that predicted that vaccine efficacy could be extended to target 65% of a population of clinically relevant strains. Immuno-manipulation of poultry microbiomes towards less harmful commensal isolates by competitive exclusion, has major potential for reducing pathogens in the food production chain.
Publisher
npj Vaccines
Published On
Jun 12, 2024
Authors
Jessica K. Calland, Maiju E. Pesonen, Jai Mehat, Ben Pascoe, David J. Haydon, Jose Lourenço, Barbara Lukasiewicz, Evangelos Mourkas, Matthew D. Hitchings, Roberto M. La Ragione, Philip Hammond, Timothy S. Wallis, Jukka Corander, Samuel K. Sheppard
Tags
Campylobacterfood-borne gastroenteritispoultry vaccinegenomic approachextra-intestinal survival
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 22+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny