Abstract

Strains of Salmonella enterica serotype Berta, collected over a period of 6 years from a well documented natural outbreak in Denmark, have been characterized in order to assess the stability of chromosomal typing systems and virulence properties. Outbreak strains were identical in Pvu II and PSTI IS200 profiles, all but two strains showed the same Sma I ribotype, and all but one strain showed the same Not I pulsed field gel electrophoretic pattern, indicating that these molecular markers remained almost constant during the outbreak. In general, strains of S. Berta were found to be of moderate to low virulence; log VC10 values were found to vary between 3.0 and 4.4 after i.p. challenge of mice, and maximum CFU in internal organs of day-old chicks varied between 2 and 4 log10 units following oral challenge. The minor differences observed between strains in vivo did not correlate with differences in in vitro invasion into cultured MDCK cells, nor with in vitro growth characteristics. A succession of different plasmid profile types was observed during the outbreak but a hierarchical selection of clones based on differences in virulence was unlikely to have caused the succession of types of S. Berta during this outbreak.

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