| Literature DB >> 28826770 |
Harish Menghwar1, Chenfei He1, Hui Zhang1, Gang Zhao1, Xifang Zhu1, Farhan Anwar Khan2, Muhammad Faisal1, Muhammad Asif Rasheed1, Muhammad Zubair1, Atta Muhammad Memon1, Anne Ridley3, Ian D Robertson4, Yingyu Chen5, Aizhen Guo6.
Abstract
This study was undertaken to determine the genotypic distribution of Chinese M. bovis strains and their similarity to isolates from other countries. Two multilocus sequence typing (MLST) schemes (MLST-1 and MLST-2) and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) were used to compare 44 Chinese strains and the M. bovis type strain PG45. The results showed a high genetic homogeneity of Chinese isolates; 43 of 44 (97.7%) Chinese isolates were identified as ST-10 and as ST-34 by MLST-1, while for MLST-2 42 of 44 (95.5%) were identified as ST-10 with the two remaining isolates of ST-32 and ST43. PFGE clustered 42 of 44 (95.5%) of the Chinese isolates into PT-I. The overall agreement rate between the three typing methods was 97.8% (95% CI:86.8-99.9%). The type strain PG45 was identified as a unique type by all three methods. When the MLST-2 scheme was further used to analyze 16 isolates of Australian and Israeli origin ST-10 was more dominant among Australian isolates (7/8), compared with those from Israel (3/8). The evolutionary relationship of the 60 isolates typed in this study assessed together with 206 additional isolates retrieved from pubmlst/mbovis database analyzed by geoBURST Minimum spanning tree (MST) confirmed that the Chinese, Israeli and Australian M. bovis isolates typed in this study that were predominantly ST-10, were clustered in CC3 with isolates originating from the USA. Our results suggest that ST-10 is an emerging clone of M. bovis population. We hypothesized that the widespread distribution of this type is a result of global livestock movements. These findings will help further the understanding of the global evolution of M. bovis and development of novel vaccines against M. bovis.Entities:
Keywords: Cattle; Evolution; Molecular epidemiology; Multilocus sequence typing (MLST); Mycoplasma bovis; Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28826770 DOI: 10.1016/j.micpath.2017.08.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Pathog ISSN: 0882-4010 Impact factor: 3.738