Abstract

Brucella melitensis is the causative agent of brucellosis in small ruminants and is of considerable economic and public health importance in many countries worldwide. The control of disease in humans depends on the control of disease in livestock; however, few counties with endemic B. melitensis infection have been able to successfully eradicate this pathogen. This underscores the need for further research on the pathogenesis of both virulent and vaccine strains of B. melitensis in the small ruminant host. The aim of the present study was to characterize clinical effects, tissue colonization, shedding, and humoral immune response following B. melitensis infection in goats. Both virulent (16M) and reduced virulence (Rev. 1) strains of B. melitensis were studied. Pregnant goats were infected at 11–14 weeks of gestation with 8 x 106 or 8 x 107 CFU of B. melitensis. Infection of goats with B. melitensis 16M resulted in an 86% abortion rate. This strain disseminated widely in pregnant does post-infection with none of the 15 sampled tissues spared from colonization. Importantly, we report the first isolation of B. melitensis from muscle tissue in ruminants. Pathogenesis of Rev. 1 infection was variable with two does showing minimal colonization and one doe exhibiting disease similar to that of animals infected with fully virulent 16M. Shedding of B. melitensis in milk occurred in all 16M- and Rev. 1- infected goats. In pregnant animals challenged with virulent B. melitensis, median time to seroconversion was 21 days; however, 2 animals did not seroconvert until after abortion.

Highlights

  • Brucella melitensis, a gram-negative bacterial pathogen, is the causative agent of brucellosis in small ruminants

  • The present study provides a thorough assessment of the clinical effects resulting from B. melitensis infection in goats, a natural host

  • The clinical effects, pathogenesis, and shedding of two strains of B. melitensis in goats are reported in the present study

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of the present study was to characterize clinical effects, tissue colonization, shedding, and humoral immune response following B. melitensis infection in goats. The goal of the present research was to study the course of pathogenesis and immunity following B. melitensis infection in goats by evaluating disease caused by both the fully virulent B. melitensis strain 16M and the reduced virulence strain Rev. 1. The objective of the present study was a descriptive analysis of B. melitensis pathogenesis in goats

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