Article Dans Une Revue (Article De Synthèse) Journal of Innate Immunity Année : 2019

Dynamics of structural barriers and innate immune components during incubation of the avian egg : critical interplay between autonomous embryonic development and maternal anticipation

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The integrated innate immune features of the calcareous egg and its contents are a critical underpinning of the remarkable evolutionary success of the Aves clade. Beginning at the time of laying, the initial protective structures of the egg, i.e., the biomineralized eggshell, egg-white antimicrobial peptides, and vitelline membrane, are rapidly and dramatically altered during embryonic development. The embryo-generated extra-embryonic tissues (chorioallantoic/amniotic membranes, yolk sac, and associated chambers) are all critical to counteract degradation of primary egg defenses during development. With a focus on the chick embryo (Gallus gallus domesticus), this review describes the progressive transformation of egg innate immunity by embryo-generated structures and mechanisms over the 21-day course of egg incubation, and also discusses the critical interplay between autonomous development and maternal anticipation.
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hal-02622940 , version 1 (26-05-2020)

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Maxwell Hincke, Mylène da Silva, Nicolas Guyot, Joël Gautron, Marc Mckee, et al.. Dynamics of structural barriers and innate immune components during incubation of the avian egg : critical interplay between autonomous embryonic development and maternal anticipation. Journal of Innate Immunity, 2019, 11 (2), pp.111-124. ⟨10.1159/000493719⟩. ⟨hal-02622940⟩
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