| Literature DB >> 30839254 |
Sankhya Bommana1, Martina Jelocnik1, Nicole Borel2, Ian Marsh3, Scott Carver4, Adam Polkinghorne1.
Abstract
Chlamydia pecorum and Chlamydia abortus are related ruminant pathogens endemic to different global regions. Potential co-infections combined with the lack of species-specific serological assays challenge accurate diagnosis. Serological screening revealed low C. abortus seropositivity with the peptide-based ELISA (1/84; 1.2%) in Australian sheep yet moderate seropositivity in a Swiss flock with history of C. abortus-associated abortions (17/63; 26.9%). By whole cell antigen complement fixation tests (CFT) and ELISA, chlamydial seropositivity was significantly higher in all groups, suggesting cross-reactivity between these two chlamydial species and non-specificity of the tests. However, only C. pecorum DNA could be detected by qPCR in Chlamydia seropositive Australian animals screened, suggesting chlamydial seropositivity was due to cross-reactivity with endemic C. pecorum infections. These results suggest ascribing Chlamydia seropositivity to chlamydial species in livestock using whole-cell antigen CFT or ELISA should be treated with caution; and that peptide-based ELISA and qPCR provide greater chlamydial species-specificity.Entities:
Keywords: Chlamydia abortus; Chlamydia pecorum; ovine enzootic abortion; peptide antigen based ELISA; serology; whole antigen based ELISA
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30839254 DOI: 10.1099/jmm.0.000951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Microbiol ISSN: 0022-2615 Impact factor: 2.472