The Infectious Bronchitis Coronavirus Pneumonia Model Presenting a Novel Insight for the SARS-CoV-2 Dissemination Route

Bibliographic Details
Parent link:Veterinary Sciences
Vol. 8, iss. 10.— 2021.— [239, 14 p.]
Corporate Author: Национальный исследовательский Томский политехнический университет Исследовательская школа химических и биомедицинских технологий
Other Authors: Nefedova E. Ekaterina, Koptev V. Vyacheslav, Bobikova A. S. Anna, Cherepushkina V. Viktoriya, Mironova T. E. Tatjyana Evgenjevna, Afonyushkin V. Vasily, Shkil N. Nikolay, Donchenko N. Nikolay, Kozlova Yu. N. Yuliya Nikolaevna, Sigareva N. Nataljya, Davydova N. Nataljya, Bogdanchikova N. Nina, Pestryakov A. N. Aleksey Nikolaevich, Toledano-Magana Ya. Yanis
Summary:Title screen
Infectious bronchitis (IB) of chickens is a highly contagious disease characterized by damage of the respiratory system and reproductive organs in young animals caused by a virus of the genus Gamma coronavirus. The condition of the respiratory system caused by the IB virus in chickens has many similarities with the pathology of the respiratory system caused by SARS-CoV-2 in humans. The effectiveness of virucidal drugs (Argovit, Triviron, Ecocid, and lauric acid monoglyceride) was tested on chickens inoculated with a tenfold dose of a vaccine strain based on the attenuated virus H120 against IB of chickens. On the 6th day after inoculation, inflammatory changes in the intestines, lungs, and thymus were observed in the control group. The experimental groups were characterized by less pronounced inflammatory reactions and a lower proportion of thymus and lung probes containing genomic IB virus RNA. Since the virucidal activity of four orally administrated formulations was possible only in the intestine, the experimental data indirectly confirmed the hypothesis of the possibility of the predominant accumulation of coronaviruses in the intestine and subsequent lung damage due to the hematogenous redistribution of viral particles and IBV antigens. It was suggested that other coronaviruses including SARS-CoV-2 can implement a similar mechanism.
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci8100239
Format: Electronic Book Chapter
KOHA link:https://koha.lib.tpu.ru/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=667423