| Literature DB >> 32776203 |
Ahmad Fawzy1,2, Jörg Rau3, Karin Riße2, Nicole Schauerte4, Christina Geiger4, Jochen Blom5, Can Imirzalioglu6, Jane Falgenhauer6, Alexa Bach7, Christiane Herden7, Tobias Eisenberg8,9.
Abstract
Streptobacillus felis is a fastidious microorganism and a novel member of the potentially zoonotic bacteria causing rat bite fever. Since its description, this is the second isolation of S. felis in a diseased member of the Felidae. Interestingly, the strain from this study was isolated from a zoo held, rusty-spotted cat (Prionailurus rubiginosus), with pneumonia, thereby indicating a possible broader host range in feline species. A recent preliminary sampling of domestic cats (Felis silvestris forma catus) revealed that this microorganism is common in the oropharynx, suggesting that S. felis is a member of their normal microbiota. Due to unawareness, fastidiousness, antibiotic sensitivity and lack of diagnostics the role of S. felis as a cat and human pathogen might be under-reported as with other Streptobacillus infections. More studies are necessary to elucidate the role of S. felis in domestic cats and other Felidae in order to better estimate its zoonotic potential.Entities:
Keywords: Cat reservoir; Immuno-histochemistry (IHC); Rat bite fever; Streptobacillus felis; Zoonosis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32776203 PMCID: PMC7415334 DOI: 10.1007/s10482-020-01454-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek ISSN: 0003-6072 Impact factor: 2.271
Fig. 1UPGMA consensus tree depicting phylotypes and species of the family Leptotrichiaceae. The data set was based on 16S rRNA gene sequences and processed in Geneious vers. 8.1.9 (Kearse et al. 2012) using a Clustal W nucleotide alignment with standard settings and rapid bootstrap analysis (1,000 bootstraps). GenBank accession numbers are given in parentheses. Numbers at branch nodes refer to bootstrap values; Fusobacterium nucleatum is used as outgroup. “T” indicating type strain; Bar, 0.02 nucleotide substitutions per site
Fig. 2Dendrogram including reference main spectra (MSP) of the family Leptotrichiaceae available in the Bruker Taxonomy Database; spectra of Streptobacillus canis IHIT1603-19T, S. felis 131000547T, S. notomytis AHL 370-1T, S. ratti OGS16T, Pseudostreptobacillus hongkongensis DSM26322T, Caviibacter abscessus CCUG39713T, Oceanivirga salmonicida AVG2115T, Oceanivirga miroungae ES3154-GLUT, Sebaldella termitidis NCTC11300T, Sneathia sanguinegens CCUG41628T reference strains were recorded using an acetonitrile-formic acid extraction protocol. The dendrogram was generated using the MBT Compass Explorer MSP Dendrogram Creation Standard Method (v1.4) of the MALDI Biotyper OC Software (v3.1, build 66). The database used (DB 8,468, BrukerDaltonics) comprised only strains of Streptobacillus moniliformis including the the type strain DSM 12112T as well as spectra of the depicted Leptotrichia spp.; T, type strain; ENR, European Network for the Rapid Identification of Anaerobes (ENRIA)
Fig. 3Core genome phylogenetic tree depicting strain LHL191014123 within the family Leptotrichiaceae. Core genes of these genomes were computed in EDGAR 2.3 based on MUSCLE alignments and the Neighbor-Joining algorithm as implemented in the PHYLIP package. The core genome analysis was based on of 267 genes per genome in 17 type species genomes (5,607 in total) of the family Leptotrichiaceae. The core has 95,146 amino acid residues and 1,998,066 bp per genome in total. GenBank accession numbers are given in parentheses. “Sneathia amnii” and “Leptotrichia massiliensis” were included, however, these taxonomic names have been effectively published but not validly published under the rules of the International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria. Fusobacterium nucleatum is used as outgroup. “T” indicating type strain; Bar, 0.01 amino acid substitutions per site