Phylogenetic analysis of Salmonella species isolated from cows, buffaloes, and humans based on gyrB gene sequences
Autor: | Nagla H. Abu Faddan, H. A. Abd ElKader, Lamiaa M. Ahmed, Amal Sayed, Amira Adel Taha Al Hosary |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Veterinary medicine
Salmonella Phylogenetic tree 040301 veterinary sciences Zoonosis 0402 animal and dairy science food and beverages Salmonella infection 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences Raw milk Biology medicine.disease medicine.disease_cause 040201 dairy & animal science law.invention 0403 veterinary science Food Animals Genetic distance law medicine Animal Science and Zoology Feces Polymerase chain reaction |
Zdroj: | Tropical Animal Health and Production. 52:1487-1492 |
ISSN: | 1573-7438 0049-4747 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11250-019-02155-y |
Popis: | This study aimed to investigate the role of dairy cows and buffaloes as reservoirs of nontyphoidal salmonelloses (NTS), to reveal the occurrence of NTS among dairy workers and children with acute diarrhea and to study the gyrB gene phylogenetic relations of the obtained Salmonella strains, 300 samples were chosen randomly from clinically infected animals, including 100 feces and 50 raw milk from buffaloes and cows. Five hundred samples were chosen randomly from healthy animals, including 150 feces and 100 raw milk from buffaloes and cows. A total of 160 stool samples were randomly chosen from healthy workers (60) and children with acute diarrhea (100). Salmonella species were isolated from the examined samples and identified by polymerase chain reaction. Sequencing and phylogenetic analyses of gyrB gene were also performed. S. enteritidis and S.typhimurium were isolated from 0.5% (2/400) of the cows and buffaloes, respectively. Dairy workers were found to be at greater risk of exposure to Salmonella infection (5%) than children (1%). S. enteritidis was isolated from 1.7% (1/60) of dairy workers. S. typhimurium was isolated from 3.33% (2/60) and 1% (1/100) of dairy workers and children, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis of Salmonella species gyrB gene sequences from both animals and humans falls inside one clade, and all of them were closely related to each other with less significant genetic distance (99.9:100). In conclusion, cows and buffaloes act as reservoirs of Salmonella infection in dairy farms in Egypt and contribute a risk of zoonotic transmission to human. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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