| Literature DB >> 25987302 |
Junrong Liang1, Ran Duan1, Shengli Xia2, Qiong Hao3, Jinchuan Yang4, Yuchun Xiao1, Haiyan Qiu1, Guoxiang Shi5, Shukun Wang6, Wenpeng Gu7, Chunxiang Wang8, Mingliu Wang9, Kecheng Tian10, Longze Luo11, Meng Yang12, Huaiyu Tian13, Jiazheng Wang1, Huaiqi Jing14, Xin Wang15.
Abstract
The results in this study show the prevalence of Yersinia enterocolitica varies in different animal species and regions of China. The highest prevalence is among pigs (12.91%), followed by dogs (9.80%), Ochotona curzoniae (plateau pica) (6.76%), chickens (4.50%), rodents (3.40%), cattle (2.78%) and sheep (0.89%). Pathogenic isolates comprised the majority of the Y. enterocolitica recovered from pigs (73.50%) and dogs (59.44%); whereas the nonpathogenic Y. enterocolitica made up most of poultry and wildlife recovered strains. A correlation analysis comparing the prevalence and geographic factors showed the isolation rate of Y. enterocolitica in pigs and dogs was negatively correlated with elevation (r=-0.50, P<0.05) and annual average air temperature (r=-0.43, P<0.05), but there was positive correlation with annual precipitation (r=0.43, P<0.05); conversely, the isolation rate from wildlife is positively correlated with elevation (r=0.3, P<0.05) contrary to the result seen in livestock. Twelve novel biotype 2 pathogenic Y. enterocolitica carried ail and ystB virulence genes, and one biotype 1A nonpathogenic strain positive with ail, ystB and ystA genes were isolated from Microtus fuscus (Qinghai vole) on plague foci of the Qinghai-Xizang plateau. The PFGE pattern K6GN11C30021 was predominant in pigs (44.25%) and patients (41.18%); K6GN11C30068 was predominant in dogs (40.16%). Animal isolates from the same region shared the same pattern (K6GN11C30021 and K6GN11C30012), indicating they may be from the same clone and arose through cross infection. Moreover, the identical PFGE pattern among local animals and diarrhea patients suggested that the animals may be the source of infections in these areas.Entities:
Keywords: Ecology distribution of Yersinia; Livestock; Multi-host pathogens; Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis; Wildlife; Zoonosis
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25987302 DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2015.05.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Microbiol ISSN: 0378-1135 Impact factor: 3.293