Abstract

BackgroundSalmonella is generally considered as a human pathogen causing typhoid fever and gastrointestinal infections called salmonellosis, with S. Enteritidis and S. Typhimurium strains as the main causative agents. Salmonella enterica strains have a wide host array including humans, birds, pigs, horses, dogs, cats, reptiles, amphibians and insects. Up to 90% of reptiles are the carriers of one or more serovars of Salmonella. Extraintestinal bacterial infections associated with reptiles pose serious health threat to humans. The import of exotic species of reptiles as pet animals to Europe correlates with the emergence of Salmonella serotypes, which not found previously in European countries. The presented study is a new report about Salmonella serotypes associated with exotic reptiles in Poland. The goal of this research was to examine the zoonotic potential of Salmonella strains isolated from reptiles by comparative analysis with S. Enteritidis strains occurring in human population and causing salmonellosis.ResultsThe main findings of our work show that exotic reptiles are asymptomatic carriers of Salmonella serovars other than correlated with salmonellosis in humans (S. Enteritidis, S. Typhimurium). Among the isolated Salmonella strains we identified serovars that have not been reported earlier in Poland, for example belonging to subspecies diarizonae and salamae. Restriction analysis with Pulsed-field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE), showed a great diversity among Salmonella strains isolated from reptiles. Almost all tested strains had distinct restriction patterns. While S. Enteritidis strains were quite homogeneous in term of phylogenetic relations. Most of the tested VGs were common for the two tested groups of Salmonella strains.ConclusionsThe obtained results show that Salmonella strains isolated from reptiles share most of virulence genes with the S. Enteritidis strains and exhibit a greater phylogenetic diversity than the tested S. Enteritidis population.

Highlights

  • Salmonella is generally considered as a human pathogen causing typhoid fever and gastrointestinal infections called salmonellosis, with S

  • Identification of bacterial strains Bacterial strains used in this study were assigned to Salmonella genus with the following methods: biochemical tests, MALDI-TOF MS analysis and 16S rRNA sequencing

  • All tested bacterial strains were classified as Salmonella enterica group with 98.32–100% sequence similarity

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Summary

Introduction

Salmonella is generally considered as a human pathogen causing typhoid fever and gastrointestinal infections called salmonellosis, with S. Enteritidis strains occurring in human population and causing salmonellosis. Infections, caused by nontyphoidal Salmonella strains (NTS), are recorded worldwide (94 million cases/ year) but the epidemiological data are probably underestimated as many milder cases are neither diagnosed nor reported [1]. The number of cases of salmonellosis has been decreasing for over a dozen of years, the epidemiological data from Poland indicate a significant increase of Salmonella gastrointestinal infections in 2017. Roll et al reported a case of transplacental infection of a premature infant by NTS in a woman with diarrhea and fever. Pumberger and Novak reported a case of a lethal infection of a newborn caused by NTS. Enteritidis during childbirth [4]

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