A unique genotype of Leptospira interrogans serovar Pomona type kennewicki is associated with equine abortion
Autor: | Michael Fettinger, J. Michael Donahue, John F. Timoney, Sridhar Velineni, Sergey Artiushin, Natarajaseenivasan Kalimuthusamy |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Serotype
Animals Wild Minisatellite Repeats Biology Microbiology Polymerase Chain Reaction Serology Pregnancy biology.animal Leptospiraceae Genotype Animals Horses Genetic diversity General Veterinary Genetic Variation General Medicine Abortion Veterinary biology.organism_classification Virology Leptospira interrogans serovar pomona Minisatellite Female Horse Diseases Equidae |
Zdroj: | Veterinary microbiology. 150(3-4) |
ISSN: | 1873-2542 |
Popis: | Although serologic data indicate horses in N. America are exposed to a variety of leptospiral serovars, abortion is almost always associated with Leptospira interrogans serovar Pomona type kennewicki. A variety of wildlife including raccoons, white tailed deer, striped skunks, opossums, and red and grey foxes have been shown to host serovar Pomona and have therefore been suspect as sources of infection for pregnant mares. The aim of the present study was to examine genetic diversity in serovar Pomona type kennewicki in wildlife and in aborting mares. Our approach utilized PCR that targeted tandem repeats at the VNTR – 4 locus and a 1235 bp 5′-sequence of the lk73.5 ( sph2 ) and adjacent upstream sequence unique to serovar Pomona. All isolates/specimens of equine origin in 1992 and 2008 yielded amplicons of 1235 and 595 bp, whereas 14 isolates/specimens from wildlife yielding a 1235 bp amplicon characteristic of serovar Pomona produced amplicons of 1300, 550 bp (3), 1300 bp (10), or 595 bp (6) with the VNTR – 4 primer set. Wildlife therefore hosted at least three different genetic variants of type kennewicki including the genetic variant that predominated in aborting mares. The data are consistent with other studies indicating specific genetic variants of type kennewicki show a strong tendency to be associated with a specific host. Levels of antibody in wildlife sera reactive with rLk73.5, rLig130 and sonicate of type kennewicki were poorly correlated with PCR data, although rLk73.5 was superior to rLig130 in detection of antibody responses. PCR is therefore a more reliable tool for studies of wildlife reservoirs of Leptospira sp. than serologic surveillance that targets host induced proteins or LPS-rich sonicate. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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