Abstract

Campylobacter jejuni is a common cause of bacterial gastroenteritis in most parts of the world. The bacterium has a broad host range and has been isolated from many animals and environments. To investigate shedding patterns and putative effects on an avian host, we developed a colonization model in which a wild bird species, the European Robin Erithacus rubecula, was inoculated orally with C. jejuni from either a human patient or from another wild bird species, the Song Thrush Turdus philomelos. These two isolates were genetically distinct from each other and provoked very different host responses. The Song Thrush isolate colonized all challenged birds and colonization lasted 6.8 days on average. Birds infected with this isolate also showed a transient but significant decrease in body mass. The human isolate did not colonize the birds and could be detected only in the feces of the birds shortly after inoculation. European Robins infected with the wild bird isolate generated a specific antibody response to C. jejuni membrane proteins from the avian isolate, which also was cross-reactive to membrane proteins of the human isolate. In contrast, European Robins infected with the human isolate did not mount a significant response to bacterial membrane proteins from either of the two isolates. The difference in colonization ability could indicate host adaptations.

Highlights

  • Infections caused by Campylobacter jejuni account for a large proportion of cases of human bacterial gastroenteritis in industrialized countries [1]

  • Does colonization of C. jejuni have any measurable effects on body condition, or are wild birds asymptomatic carriers similar to chickens? To answer such questions, we developed a wild bird colonization model using European Robins Erithacus rubecula and challenged this model with C. jejuni isolates from different origins

  • We show that the European Robin can readily be colonized with a C. jejuni isolate obtained from a closely-related bird species and that this isolate causes a specific immune response, as well as measurable effects on body condition

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Summary

Introduction

Infections caused by Campylobacter jejuni account for a large proportion of cases of human bacterial gastroenteritis in industrialized countries [1]. The most prominent source for human infections is consumption of chicken meat, either directly or through cross-contamination with other food items [14] It is a diverse multi-host pathogen, there are sets of C. jejuni genotypes that seem restricted to certain hosts, and some genotypes are associated more often with human disease than others [14,15,16]. Serotyping and genotyping of isolates have shown that the largest proportion of C. jejuni genotypes occurring in wild birds are restricted to these hosts, and that only a minority of genotypes are shared between human/poultry and wild birds [11,12,13,17,18,19,20] These findings suggest that certain strains of C. jejuni may have adapted to different wild bird hosts [11,13], which is supported by the pattern seen among clinical and veterinary sources [14,16,21,22], or to survival and transmission in particular environments

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