| Literature DB >> 33375583 |
Md Monirul Hoque1, Folasade Adekanmbi1, Subarna Barua1, Kh Shamsur Rahman1, Virginia Aida1, Brian Anderson2, Anil Poudel1, Anwar Kalalah1, Sara Bolds3, Steven Madere3, Steven Kitchens1, Stuart Price1, Vienna Brown4, B Graeme Lockaby3, Constantinos S Kyriakis1, Bernhard Kaltenboeck1, Chengming Wang1.
Abstract
Chlamydia suis is an important, highly prevalent, and diverse obligate intracellular pathogen infecting pigs. In order to investigate the prevalence and diversity of C. suis in the U.S., 276 whole blood samples from feral swine were collected as well as 109 fecal swabs and 60 whole blood samples from domestic pigs. C. suis-specific peptide ELISA identified anti-C. suis antibodies in 13.0% of the blood of feral swine (26/276) and 80.0% of the domestic pigs (48/60). FRET-qPCR and DNA sequencing found C. suis DNA in 99.1% of the fecal swabs (108/109) and 21.7% of the whole blood (13/60) of the domestic pigs, but not in any of the assayed blood samples (0/267) in feral swine. Phylogenetic comparison of partial C. suis ompA gene sequences and C. suis-specific multilocus sequencing typing (MLST) revealed significant genetic diversity of the C. suis identified in this study. Highly genetically diverse C. suis strains are prevalent in domestic pigs in the USA. As crowding strongly enhances the frequency and intensity of highly prevalent Chlamydia infections in animals, less population density in feral swine than in domestic pigs may explain the significantly lower C. suis prevalence in feral swine. A future study is warranted to obtain C. suis DNA from feral swine to perform genetic diversity of C. suis between commercial and feral pigs.Entities:
Keywords: Chlamydia suis; PCR; USA; feral swine; peptide ELISA
Year: 2020 PMID: 33375583 PMCID: PMC7823902 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10010011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817