Abstract

Avian tuberculosis is a chronic, contagious zoonotic disease affecting birds, mammals, and humans. The disease is most often caused by Mycobacterium avium spp. avium (MAA). Strain resources are important for research on avian tuberculosis and vaccine development. However, there has been little reported about the newly identified MAA strain in recent years in China. In this study, a new strain was isolated from a fowl with symptoms of avian tuberculosis by bacterial culture. The isolated strain was identified to be MAA by culture, staining, and biochemical and genetic analysis, except for different colony morphology. The isolated strain was Ziehl-Zeelsen staining positive, resistant to p-nitrobenzoic acid, and negative for niacin production, Tween-80 hydrolysis, heat stable catalase and nitrate production. The strain had the DnaJ gene, IS1245, and IS901, as well. Serum agglutination indicated that the MAA strain was of serotype 1. The MAA strain showed strong virulence via mortality in rabbits and chickens. The prepared tuberculin of the MAA strain had similar potency compared to the MAA reference strain and standard tuberculin via a tuberculin skin test. Our studies suggested that this MAA strain tends to be a novel subtype, which might enrich the strain resource of avian tuberculosis.

Highlights

  • Our studies suggested that this Mycobacterium avium spp. avium (MAA) strain tends to be a novel subtype, which might enrich the strain resource of avian tuberculosis

  • Avian tuberculosis is a serious, chronic infectious zoonotic disease in poultry, pet, or captive birds, animals, and humans that is caused by Mycobacterium avium spp. avium (MAA), a subspecies of the M. avium complex (MAC)

  • Our study revealed that this isolated MAA strain showed a novel colony appearance not previously reported

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Summary

Introduction

Avian tuberculosis is a serious, chronic infectious zoonotic disease in poultry, pet, or captive birds, animals, and humans that is caused by Mycobacterium avium spp. avium (MAA), a subspecies of the M. avium complex (MAC). Once fowls in poultry farms are infected, avian tuberculosis can persist for a long time and is difficult to eradicate, due to the chronic carrier state and shedding of bacteria by infected fowls [5, 6]. This disease can have a serious economic impact associated with mortality, morbidity, and a reduction of egg production [1, 6]. The best way is to quarantine and slaughter the infected ones [6, 7], as well as antibiotic treatment with the infected individuals [8, 9]

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