| Literature DB >> 30518323 |
Abinet Legesse1, Takele Abayneh2, Gezahegne Mamo3, Esayas Gelaye1, Liyuwork Tesfaw1, Martha Yami1, Alebachew Belay1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mannheimia haemolytica has been recognized as the principal cause of pneumonic pasteurellosis in sheep and goats. It is one of the important diseases of small ruminants in Ethiopia. While annual vaccination using a monovalent vaccine (inactivated Pasteurella multocida biotype A) is common, respiratory diseases are still reported in various parts of Ethiopia. This suggests the need for further investigation into the species and strains responsible for the disease, which is vital information for development of a multivalent vaccine. The objective of the current study was to isolate M. heamolytica associated with pneumonic cases of sheep in selected areas of Central Ethiopia, determine its role and the strains/genotypes of the bacterium circulating in the study area.Entities:
Keywords: Central Ethiopia; Mannheimia haemolytica; Molecular characterization; Sheep
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30518323 PMCID: PMC6280500 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-018-1338-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Primer pairs flanking capsular genes of P. multocida and virulence associated genes of M. haemolytica used in the current study
| Gene locus | Primer sequence (5′- 3′) | Size (bp) | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Forward | 5’-TGCCAAAATCGCAGTCAG- 3’ | 1044 | [ |
| Reverse | 5′ -TTGCCATCATTGTCAGTG- 3’ | |||
|
| Forward | 5′ -TTC ACA TCT TCA TCC TC-3’ | 325 | [ |
| Reverse | 5′ TTT TCA TCC TCT TCG TC-3’ | |||
|
| Forward | 5′ - GTT TGT AAG ATA TCC CAT TT- 3’ | 1022 | [ |
| Reverse | 5′- CGT TTT CCA CTT GCG TGA − 3’ | |||
Nucleotide accession numbers of PHSSA and Rpt2 gene sequences of the current isolates and reference strains M. haemolytica included in the analysis
| Isolate | Accession noa | Source or reference |
|---|---|---|
| MH220354* | This study | |
| MH220353*; MH220358** | This study | |
| MH220355*; MH220359** | This study | |
| MH220357** | This study | |
| MH220360** | This study | |
| MH220356** | This study | |
| CP004753.2 | [ | |
| CP005383.1 | [ | |
| CP006574.1 | [ | |
| CP006573.1 | [ | |
| CP005972.1 | ||
| KJ534629.1 | [ | |
| KJ566123.1 | [ | |
| CP011098.1 | [ | |
| CP023043.1 | [ | |
| CP023044.1 | [ | |
| CP006957.2 | [ | |
| CP011099.1 | [ | |
| CP004752.2 | [ | |
| CP023046.1 | [ | |
| CP023047.1 | [ | |
| MF417618.1 | [ | |
| MF776879.1 | [ | |
| AF060119.2 | [ |
aAcc.no refer to both PHSSA and Rpt2 gene sequences; *Acc.no for only PHSSA gene; **acc.no for only Rpt2 gene
Recovery rate of isolates with respect to the study areas
| Study sites | Number tested | Isolates | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| |||
| # (%) | # (%) | |||
| Addis Ababa | 11 | 2 (18.18) | nil | 2 (18.18) |
| Ada’a (DZ/Kality) | 27 | 10 (37.03) | 2 (7.41) | 12 (44.44) |
| Lome (Ejere) | 17 | 8 (47.06) | nil | 8 (47.06) |
| Adama | 21 | 6 (28.57) | nil | 6 (28.57) |
| Total | 76 | 26 (34.21) | 2 (2.63) | 28 (36.84) |
Biochemical characteristics of the isolates presumptively identified as M. haemolytica and B. trehalosi
| Reaction |
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Haemolysis | + | + |
| Motility | – | – |
| Catalase | + | + |
| Oxidase | + | + |
| Growth on MacConkey | + | + |
| Indole production | – | – |
| Glucose | + | + |
| Lactose | + | – |
| Sucrose | + | + |
| Interpretation |
|
|
Fig. 1Agarose gel electrophoresis showing PCR products of Rpt2 and PHSSA genes approximately 1022 and 325 bp, respectively. Lanes: M = 1 kb plus DNA molecular markers; 1–16: Isolates (lane 10 and 14: B.trehalosi isolates, please describe the other M. haemolytica positive lanes). N: Negative control-; P: positive control
Fig. 2Agarose gel electrophoresis showing PCR products (approximately 1044 bp) using primer pairs targeting capsular biosynthesis gene of P. multocida. Lanes: M = 1 kb plus DNA molecular marker, E: Extraction control, Lane 1–9:M.haemolytica isolates. N: Negative control, V: NVI vaccine strain (P. multocida type A) positive around 1044 bp. P: positive control
Fig. 3Agarose gel electrophoresis showing PCR products (approximately 1044 bp) using primer pairs targeting capsular biosynthesis gene of P. multocida and B trehalosi as template. Lanes: M = 1 kb plus DNA molecular marker, Lane VC: NVI reference strain (M. haemolytica serotype A2 isolate), Lane 1–2: B. trehalosi isolates, N: Negative control; E: extraction control, P: positive control
Fig. 4Evolutionary relationships of 19 Mannheimia haemolytica isolates including three isolates from Ethiopia with respect to PHSSA gene partial sequence. Codon positions included were 1st + 2nd + 3rd + Noncoding. All positions containing gaps and missing data were eliminated. There were a total of 301 positions in the final dataset
Fig. 5Phylogenetic analysis of 18 Mannheimia haemolytica strains including four isolates from Ethiopia using Rpt2 gene sequence. Codon positions included were 1st + 2nd + 3rd + Noncoding. All positions containing gaps and missing data were eliminated. There were a total of 780 positions in the final dataset