| Literature DB >> 30691029 |
Aminul Islam1, John Stenos2, Gemma Vincent3, Stephen Graves4,5.
Abstract
This small study reports on a non-pyrogenic response of five different Australian isolates of Coxiella burnetii (C. burnetii). They were all members of Genomic Group IV and obtained from three cases of acute human infection, one case of chronic human infection and one case of goat abortion. The guinea pigs infected with these isolates did not develop fever (temperature ≥40.0 °C), which is consistent with other members of this genomic group that were isolated from elsewhere in the world. In contrast, guinea pigs infected with the classical USA tick isolate, Nine Mile phase 1 (RSA 493) of Genomic Group I, experienced a four-day febrile period.Entities:
Keywords: Australia; C. burnetii; Q fever; guinea pigs; pyrogenicity
Year: 2019 PMID: 30691029 PMCID: PMC6473353 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed4010018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Brief molecular and epidemiological features of the five Australian isolates of Coxiella burnetii (C. burnetii) used in the pyrogenicity study.
| MLVA * Genotype | Epidemiological Features | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of Q Fever | Year | Location | Animal Contact | Symptoms | Source of Isolate | ||
| AuQ01 (Human) | CbAu01 | Acute | 2005 | Armidale, Northern NSW | Goat | Fever, Jaundice | Blood |
| AuQ04 (Human) | CbAu04 | Chronic | 2007 | Swan Hill, Northern VIC | Unknown | Fever, Endocarditis/Aortic valve incompetence | Surgically removed tissue |
| AuQ10 (Human) | CbAu06 | Acute | 2011 | Coffs Harbour, Northern NSW | Unknown | Fever, Haemophagocytic | Blood |
| Syndrome | |||||||
| AuQ43 (Human) | CbAu01 | Acute | 2012 | Mt Louisa, Northern QLD | Unknown | Fever | Blood |
| AuQ57 (Animal) | CbAu01 | Goat coxiello-sis | 2012 | Meredith, Central VIC | Goat | Abortion | Aborted foetus |
* MLVA-multiple locus variable number of tandem repeats analysis.
Figure 1The temperature pattern of guinea pigs infected with five different Australian isolates of C. burnetii, with the positive (NM1) and negative (sterile RPMI 1640 media) controls over a period of 21 days post-infection. Febrile response (temperature ≥ 40.0 °C) in positive controls sustained from days 8–11 with an early onset at day 5. Throughout the experimental period, the five Australian isolates and negative control did not show febrile response and remained under 40.0 °C. The average value of temperature in each group is shown in the graph.