Abstract

In May 2018, Landes geese raised in Weifang, Shandong Province, China, developed a disease characterized by thickened oesophageal mucosa and white, round ulcers. Based on pathogen isolation and identification, differential culture and morphological observations, Candida albicans (C. albicans) was identified as the causative pathogen from the oesophagus of infected geese, and artificial infection experiments were then performed using the isolated strains. In experimental reproduction, the symptoms of infected geese were consistent with those of natural infection, and gosling morbidity and mortality were 75% and 60%, respectively. Re-isolation of the strain from the dead goslings confirmed C. albicans as the causative pathogen of oesophageal ulcers. We further performed internal transcribed space rDNA sequence analysis, ABC genotyping and multi-locus sequence typing analysis. We observed 100% sequence similarity between the two strains, designated as WFCL and WFLQ, which were isolated from different regions, with 100% homology between the strains isolated in the present study and the human-origin C. albicans strains isolated previously from China. The goose-origin strains isolated in this study and the human-origin C. albicans isolates were included in the same branch in phylogenetic trees analysis, indicating that the strain responsible for oesophageal ulcer in geese is closely related to human-origin C. albicans. In addition, based on eBURST analysis of sequence types, goose-origin C. albicans strains were relatively independent in terms of population evolution. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first detailed report on goose oesophageal ulceration caused by C. albicans infection in geese. Considering that C. albicans is an important zoonotic pathogen, this study provides a reference for further studies on avian C. albicans infections and is important for ensuring public health and safety.

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