The mechanisms used by avian strains of Escherichia coli to invade the respiratory epithelia, leading to septicemia in poultry, are not well-established. In this work, we show that resident murine peritoneal macrophages infected in vitro with an avian strain of E. coli underwent apoptosis 4 h after infection (55.6% of apoptosis in infected cells versus 3.5% in non-infected cells). Heat-inactivated bacteria did not induce apoptosis and the inhibition of phagocytosis by pretreatment of cells with cytochalasin D reduced the number of apoptotic cells from 55.6 to 13.9% (P<0.05), showing that the bacteria must be intracellularly located and viable to induce apoptosis. Therefore, these data suggest that induction of macrophage apoptosis may be a pathogenic mechanism employed by avian E. coli to circumvent the host defences and invade the respiratory epithelia.