Abstract

Mycobacterium avium subsp. hominissuis (MAH) is an important zoonotic pathogen with raising global health concerns. In humans, MAH is one of the most widespread non-tuberculous mycobacterial species responsible for lung disease. In animals, MAH is frequently isolated from pigs; however, it is also an opportunistic pathogen for other mammals including cattle. To elucidate the genetic diversity of MAH in cattle, a molecular characterization of isolates (n = 26) derived from lymph nodes was performed. Fourteen isolates originated from slaughtered cattle with visible altered lymph nodes at meat inspection, whereas 12 isolates were from lymph nodes without any gross pathological changes of healthy slaughtered cattle. Variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) analysis was performed at 20 loci to examine genetic differences of isolates and to compare to previously reported VNTR data of human isolates from different countries. Genetic elements IS901, IS1245, IS1311, LSPA17, ITS1 sequevar, and hsp65 code were determined. Interestingly, two bovine MAH isolates harbored ISMav6 and hsp65 code 15, which so far has only been observed in human isolates. We supposed that VNTR data of Swiss samples would show clustering with European samples. Minimum spanning tree and unweighted pair group method using arithmetic averages analyses based on the VNTR data indicated a specific cluster of MAH isolates obtained from lymph nodes without any gross pathological changes of healthy slaughtered cattle. Comparing Swiss isolates with isolates from different other countries, no geographical clustering was observed; however, four Swiss isolates had an identical VNTR profile as human isolates from the Netherlands, the United States, and Japan. These findings indicate a possible public health issue.

Highlights

  • Non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are ubiquitous in the environment, mainly in water and soil [1]

  • The IS901 PCR produced an amplicon for Mycobacterium avium subsp. hominissuis (MAH) isolates ZH38 and ZH43 belonging to group B

  • Sequence analysis revealed three M. avium sequevars, Mav-A, Mav-B, and Mav-F, whereas 21 isolates belonged to Mav-B (80.8%), 3 isolates to Mav-F (11.5%), and 2 isolates to Mav-A (7.7%)

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Summary

Introduction

Non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are ubiquitous in the environment, mainly in water and soil [1]. Hominis­ suis (MAH), a representative of the M. avium complex (MAC), is an environmental bacterium often found in water, soil, dust, or straw, and its main hosts are humans and pigs. It is an opportunistic pathogen for other mammals including cattle, from which it is one of the most frequently isolated NTM [2, 3]. To compare MAH isolates across geographical regions and in different hosts, variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) typing analysis based on the eight loci [mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit (MIRU)–VNTR] was developed [14]. VNTR has a high level of reproducibility and has the advantage of allowing a numerical and reproductive digitalization of typing data and enabling an optimal comparison of results between laboratories [16]

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