Torben W. Schou
University of Copenhagen
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Featured researches published by Torben W. Schou.
Comparative Immunology Microbiology and Infectious Diseases | 2010
Torben W. Schou; A. Permin; Jens Peter Christensen; H.P. Cu; Helle R. Juul-Madsen
The present study is the first demonstration of an association of the genetic serum Mannan-binding lectin (MBL) concentration with bacterial infections in chickens. The genetic serum MBL concentration was determined in two chicken breeds, and the association with the specific Pasteurella multocida humoral immune response during an experimental infection was examined. Furthermore, we examined the association of the genetic serum MBL concentration with systemic infection. The chickens with systemic infection had a statistically significant lower mean serum MBL concentration than the rest of the chickens, suggesting that MBL plays an important role against P. multocida. A statistically significant negative correlation was found between the specific antibody response and the genetic serum MBL concentration for both breeds. This indicates that MBL in chickens is capable of acting as the first line of defence against P. multocida by diminishing the infection before the adaptive immune response takes over.
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2010
Torben W. Schou; R. Labouriau; A. Permin; Jens Peter Christensen; Poul Sørensen; H.P. Cu; V.K. Nguyen; Helle R. Juul-Madsen
In three independent experimental infection studies, the susceptibility and course of infection of three pathogens considered of importance in most poultry production systems, Ascaridia galli, Salmonella Enteritidis and Pasteurella multocida were compared in two chicken breeds, the indigenous Vietnamese Ri and the commercial Luong Phuong. Furthermore, the association of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) with disease-related parameters was evaluated, using alleles of the LEI0258 microsatellite as markers for MHC haplotypes. The Ri chickens were found to be more resistant to A. galli and S. Enteritidis than commercial Luong Phuong chickens. In contrast, the Ri chickens were more susceptible to P. multocida, although production parameters were more affected in the Luong Phuong chickens. Furthermore, it was shown that the individual variations observed in response to the infections were influenced by the MHC. Using marker alleles of the microsatellite LEI0258, which is located within the MHC region, several MHC haplotypes were identified as being associated with infection intensity of A. galli. An association of the MHC with the specific antibody response to S. Enteritidis was also found where four MHC haplotypes were shown to be associated with high specific antibody response. Finally, one MHC haplotype was identified as being associated with pathological lesions and mortality in the P. multocida experiment. Although not statistically significant, our analysis suggested that this haplotype might be associated with resistance. These results demonstrate the presence of local genetic resources in Vietnamese chickens, which could be utilized in breeding programmes aiming at improving disease resistance.
Veterinary Parasitology | 2013
Liselotte R. Norup; Tina S. Dalgaard; Janne Pleidrup; Anders Permin; Torben W. Schou; Gregers Jungersen; Dorte Rosenbek Fink; Helle R. Juul-Madsen
Increasingly large numbers of poultry are held in production systems with access to outdoor areas. In these systems intestinal helminths are found with flock prevalences of up to 100%. Helminth infections influence chicken health negatively, which is why the following investigation has been performed. In the present experiment, 20 chickens of two inbred chicken lines containing the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) haplotypes, B14 and R5, were inoculated with 500 embryonated Ascaridia galli eggs. The A. galli-specific IgG titres of serum samples and the excretion of A. galli eggs in chicken faeces were measured for a period of 81 weeks. The level of excreted A. galli eggs measured as eggs per gram chicken faeces (EPG) varied greatly between chickens in each line. Significant differences were found between the two lines and with the R5 chickens reaching the highest levels. Likewise, the A. galli-specific IgG titres in serum differed significantly between the two lines, and an inverse relationship between infection level (EPG) and antibody titres was found. Although this inverse relationship suggests that humoral immunity may be involved in protection against A. galli infection, the high antibody titres did not prevent continued infection.
Vaccine | 2014
Janne Pleidrup; Tina S. Dalgaard; Liselotte R. Norup; Anders Permin; Torben W. Schou; Kerstin Skovgaard; Dorte Fink Vadekær; Gregers Jungersen; Poul Sørensen; Helle R. Juul-Madsen
Potent vaccine efficiency is crucial for disease control in both human and livestock vaccination programmes. Free range chickens and chickens with access to outdoor areas have a high risk of infection with parasites including Ascaridia galli, a gastrointestinal nematode with a potential influence on the immunological response to vaccination against other infectious diseases. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether A. galli infection influences vaccine-induced immunity to Newcastle Disease (ND) in chickens from an MHC-characterized inbred line. Chickens were experimentally infected with A. galli at 4 weeks of age or left as non-parasitized controls. At 10 and 13 weeks of age half of the chickens were ND-vaccinated and at 16 weeks of age, all chickens were challenged with a lentogenic strain of Newcastle disease virus (NDV). A. galli infection influenced both humoral and cell-mediated immune responses after ND vaccination. Thus, significantly lower NDV serum titres were found in the A. galli-infected group as compared to the non-parasitized group early after vaccination. In addition, the A. galli-infected chickens showed significantly lower frequencies of NDV-specific T cells in peripheral blood three weeks after the first ND vaccination as compared to non-parasitized chickens. Finally, A. galli significantly increased local mRNA expression of IL-4 and IL-13 and significantly decreased TGF-ß4 expression in the jejunum two weeks after infection with A. galli. At the time of vaccination (six and nine weeks after A. galli infection) the local expression in the jejunum of both IFN-? and IL-10 was significantly decreased in A. galli-infected chickens. Upon challenge with the NDV LaSota strain, viral genomes persisted in the oral cavity for a slightly longer period of time in A. galli-infected vaccinees as compared to non-parasitized vaccinees. However, more work is needed in order to determine if vaccine-induced protective immunity is impaired in A. galli-infected chickens.
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2015
Tina S. Dalgaard; Kerstin Skovgaard; Liselotte R. Norup; Janne Pleidrup; Anders Permin; Torben W. Schou; Dorte Fink Vadekær; Gregers Jungersen; Helle R. Juul-Madsen
Ascaridia galli is a gastrointestinal nematode infecting chickens. Chickens kept in alternative rearing systems or at free-range experience increased risk for infection with resulting high prevalences. A. galli infection causes reduced weight gain, decreased egg production and in severe cases increased mortality. More importantly, the parasitised chickens are more susceptible to secondary infections and their ability to develop vaccine-induced protective immunity against other diseases may be compromised. Detailed information about the immune response to the natural infection may be exploited to enable future vaccine development. In the present study, expression of immune genes in the chicken spleen during an experimental infection with A. galli was investigated using the Fluidigm(®) BioMark™ microfluidic qPCR platform which combines automatic high-throughput with attractive low sample and reagent consumption. Spleenic transcription of immunological genes was compared between infected chickens and non-infected controls at week 2, 6, and 9 p.i. corresponding to different stages of parasite development/maturation. At week 2 p.i. increased expression of IL-13 was observed in infected chickens. Increased expression of MBL, CRP, IFN-α, IL-1β, IL-8, IL-12β and IL-18 followed at week 6 p.i. and at both week 6 and 9 p.i. expression of DEFβ1 was highly increased in infected chickens. In summary, apart from also earlier reported increased expression of the Th2 signature cytokine IL-13 we observed only few differentially expressed genes at week 2 p.i. which corresponds to the larvae histotrophic phase. In contrast, we observed increased expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and acute phase proteins in infected chickens, by week 6 p.i. where the larvae re-enter the intestinal lumen. Increased expression of DEFβ1 was observed in infected chickens at week 6 p.i. but also at week 9 p.i. which corresponds to a matured stage where adult worms are present in the intestinal lumen.
Avian Pathology | 2013
Janne Pleidrup Andersen; Liselotte R. Norup; Tina S. Dalgaard; Lisa Rothwell; Peter K. Kaiser; Anders Permin; Torben W. Schou; Dorte Rosenbek Fink; Gregers Jungersen; Poul Sørensen; Helle R. Juul-Madsen
In chickens, the nematode Ascaridia galli is found with prevalences of up to 100% causing economic losses to farmers. No avian nematode vaccines have yet been developed and detailed knowledge about the chicken immune response towards A. galli is therefore of great importance. The objective of this study was to evaluate the induction of protective immune responses to A. galli soluble antigen by different immunization routes. Chickens were immunized with a crude extract of A. galli via an oral or intra-muscular route using cholera toxin B subunit as adjuvant and subsequently challenged with A. galli. Only chickens immunized via the intra-muscular route developed a specific A. galli antibody response. Frequencies of γδ T cells in spleen were higher 7 days after the first immunization in both groups but only significantly so in the intra-muscularly immunized group. In addition, systemic immunization had an effect on both Th1 and Th2 cytokines in caecal tonsils and Meckels diverticulum. Thus both humoral and cellular immune responses are inducible by soluble A. galli antigen, but in this study no protection against the parasite was achieved.
Veterinary Parasitology | 1997
Torben W. Schou; Henrik O. Bøgh; A.Lee Willingham; Ingrid Brück; Carsten Grendahl Nielsen; Erik Sørensen; Lis Eriksen; Jørn Andreassen
An objective of this study was to find a culture medium and a temperature range suitable for in vitro maintenance of adult Schistosoma japonicum during surgical transplantation experiments. Adult S. japonicum were cultivated in four different media (NCTC 135, NCTC 109, RPMI 1640 and 0.85% physiological saline) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated normal pig serum (hiNPS) at either 4 degrees C, 22-25 degrees C (room temperature) or 37 degrees C. Based on survival and morphologic evaluation, NCTC 135 at room temperature was found to be the best medium/temperature combination for maintenance of worms. An additional objective was to develop a method for transplanting adult S. japonicum from experimentally infected donor pigs to naïve recipient pigs. Six Landrace/Yorkshire crossbred pigs were used as donors to supply worms for two recipient pigs. Worms for transplantation were obtained by perfusion of the mesenteric veins of the donor pigs and maintained for a maximum of 3 h in NCTC 135 + 10% hiNPS at room temperature. A total of 148 and 132 worms were surgically transferred by way of an infusion tube into caecal veins of the two recipients. Six weeks after transplantation, 14% and 36% of the transferred worms were recovered by perfusion and subsequent manual inspection of the mesenteric veins of the two recipient pigs, respectively. The successful results suggest that surgical transfer of S. japonicum worms from donor to naïve recipient pigs may be useful for future studies on population genetics, dynamics and regulation in the pig/S. japonicum model.
Scandinavian Journal of Immunology | 2013
Liselotte R. Norup; Tina S. Dalgaard; Janne Pleidrup; Torben W. Schou; Anders Permin; Dorte Fink Vadekær; Gregers Jungersen; Helle R. Juul-Madsen
Background: HCV is a leading cause of chronic liver diseases, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Liver fibrosis and the end-stage of liver fibrosis, ‘Cirrhosis, represent the final common pathway of virtually all chronic liver diseases. During this process different biochemical markers associated with connective tissue turnover are released into the blood for example increased level of procollagen III N-terminal (PIII-NP), decreased serum level of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP1), increased levels of 7S fragment of type IV collagen, hyaluronic acid, gelatinase A, and tissue inhibitor metalloproteinases. Methods: This study was carried out on 50 patients with evidence of chronic hepatitis C, they were (42) male and (8) female. All cases were selected from out patient clinic of the hepatology unit of research institute for tropical medicine.the patients were divided according to the stage of fibrosis into 5 groups from F0 to F4 according to metavir stage.serum. MMP-1, MMP-2 and HA levels determined using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay technique. Results: Our retrospective study determines serum level of Metalloproteinase -1(MMP-1), Metalloproteinase -2 (MMP-2), and Hyaluronic acid (HA) as non invasive markers of liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C and to correlate their serum levels with the stage of fibrosis assessed by histopathological staging of liver biopsy. HA level increased significantly with progression of fibrosis whereas Serum level of MMP-1 and MMP-2 had no statistical significant change with progressive fibrosis. Conclusions: serum level of HA can be used as an independent predictor of significant fibrosis, while other studied markers are dependent predictors of significant fibrosis.
Veterinary Parasitology | 2014
A Janne Pleidrup; Liselotte R. Norup; Tina S. Dalgaard; Peter K. Kaiser; Anders Permin; Torben W. Schou; Dorte Fink Vadekær; Gregers Jungersen; Poul Sørensen; Helle R. Juul-Madsen
AIRG 2012: XII Avian Immunology Research Group Meeting | 2012
Janne Pleidrup Andersen; Liselotte R. Norup; Tina S. Dalgaard; Peter K. Kaiser; Anders Permin; Torben W. Schou; Dorte Rosenbek Fink; Gregers Jungersen; Poul Sørensen; Helle R. Juul-Madsen