Abstract

Intracellular Campylobacter-like organisms are a consistent feature of the porcine proliferative enteropathies. The relationship between these organisms and known Campylobacter sp. previously associated with the disease was studied using restriction enzyme analysis and DNA-DNA blot hybridization techniques. BglII restriction enzyme fragment patterns of DNA of the Campylobacter- like organisms were fundamentally different from those of C. mucosalis, C. hyointestinalis, C. jejuni, and C. coli Crude DNA preparations from Campylobacter-like organisms hydridized strongly with homologous preparations, weakly with porcine DNA and not at all with DNA from Campylobacter sp. Fragment specific DNA probes prepared from Campylobacter-like organisms only hybridized with homologous preparations. This work suggests that the intracellular Campylobacter-like organisms are not one of the known Campylobacter sp. It is possible that they are a novel, uncultured organism worthy of a new name, such as ‘ C. intracellulare’.

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