Abstract

Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) is an economically important bacterial pathogen of turkeys and chickens worldwide. Since its first detection, a variety of typing methods have been used to gain basic knowledge about the bacterial population structure, an issue that still needs to be addressed. Serological characterization revealed at least 18 different serotypes (A-R) with ORT of serotype A to be predominate among poultry. This study aimed to establish a multilocus sequence typing (MLST) scheme for ORT that could easily be used by other laboratories and allows for worldwide comparison of sequence data. For this purpose, 87 ORT strains from different poultry hosts, geographical origins, years of isolation and serotypes were included in the analysis to identify correlations. Fourteen different sequence types (ST) were found. The most common ST1 was identified in 40 ORT strains from turkeys and chickens on 4 continents and in 3 different European countries. Together with ST9, both STs represented over three quarters (77%) of ORT strains used in the MLST analysis and included strains of frequently cross-reacting ORT serotypes A, E and I. Nine STs were only represented by one ORT strain and might indicate possible avian host, disease or serotype-specific relationships. In contrast, discrepancies between serotype and phylogenetic relatedness were clearly demonstrated by ORT strains that belonged to identical serotypes but differed in their ST. The overall identified low genetic diversity among strains isolated from turkeys and chickens independent of host and geographical origins suggests that ORT has only recently been introduced into domestic poultry and dispersed worldwide.

Highlights

  • Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) has become an important pathogen of turkeys and chickens since its first detection and classification in the early 1990s [1, 2]

  • 7 housekeeping genes were identified from previous studies on ORT [17] and P. multocida [27], and newly developed primer pairs were used for partial sequencing of ORT strains representing different poultry hosts, geographical origins, years of isolation and serotypes

  • The multilocus sequence typing (MLST) scheme presented here can provide an unambiguous, reproducible and portable typing system to stepwise gain more insights into the population structure of ORT by identifying the extent of recombination. It has limited discriminatory power, which is most likely associated with the observed low genetic heterogeneity and clonal population structure of ORT that originated from poultry species

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) has become an important pathogen of turkeys and chickens since its first detection and classification in the early 1990s [1, 2]. Multilocus Sequence Typing of Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale [32]. Users are encouraged to upload their MLST data together with background information of ORT strains for comparison and epidemiological studies

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call