RESUMO
This study aimed to develop an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to detect antibody associated with Staphylococcus aureus that is produced during the chicken immune response to this organism. The protein nuclease was tested for suitability as an antigen to detect antibody in sera from broiler chickens that had been exposed to aerosolized S. aureus on day 1 post hatch during experiments to reproduce bacterial chondronecrosis and osteomyelitis. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed to measure the levels of nuclease antibody in 509 chicken sera from various experiments, which also enabled the examination of the influence of factors such as the S. aureus infection status and co-infection with chicken anaemia virus (CAV) and infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) on nuclease antibody levels. Positive levels of nuclease antibody were detected in 71% of serum samples from chickens inoculated with S. aureus, CAV and IBDV, while positive levels were detected in 35% of chickens inoculated with S. aureus only. The influence of CAV and IBDV on the number of chickens with positive levels was most prominent in chickens aged up to 42 days. The study showed that nuclease-specific antibodies form part of the humoral immune response in broiler chickens that have been exposed to S. aureus. Co-infection with CAV and IBDV appeared to promote development of antibody in birds younger than 42 days; however, the presence of antibody did not necessarily prevent systemic infection.