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Journal article

New Brucella variant isolated from Croatian cattle

From

Croatian Veterinary Institute1

Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire de l'alimentation, de l'environnement et du travail2

Research Group for Global Capacity Building, National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark3

Research Group for Genomic Epidemiology, National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark4

National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark5

Ministry of Agriculture, Zimbabwe6

BACKGROUND: A novel Brucella strain closely related to Brucella (B.) melitensis biovar (bv) 3 was found in Croatian cattle during testing within a brucellosis eradication programme. CASE PRESENTATION: Standardised serological, brucellin skin test, bacteriological and molecular diagnostic screening for Brucella infection led to positive detection in one dairy cattle herd.

Three isolates from that herd were identified to species level using the Bruce ladder method. Initially, two strains were typed as B. melitensis and one as B. abortus, but multiplex PCR based on IS711 and the Suis ladder showed that all of them to belong to B. melitensis, and the combination of whole-genome and multi-locus sequencing as well as Multi-Locus Variable numbers of tandem repeats Analysis (MLVA) highlighted a strong proximity within the phylogenetic branch of B. melitensis strains previously isolated from Croatia, Albania, Kosovo and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Two isolates were determined to be B. melitensis bv. 3, while the third showed a unique phylogenetic profile, growth profile on dyes and bacteriophage typing results. This isolate contained the 609-bp omp31 sequence, but not the 723-bp omp31 sequence present in the two isolates of B. melitensis bv. 3.

CONCLUSIONS: Identification of a novel Brucella variant in this geographic region is predictable given the historic endemicity of brucellosis. The emergence of a new variant may reflect a combination of high prevalence among domestic ruminants and humans as well as weak eradication strategies. The zoonotic potential, reservoirs and transmission pathways of this and other Brucella variants should be explored.

Language: English
Publisher: BioMed Central
Year: 2021
Pages: 126
ISSN: 17466148
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1186/s12917-021-02833-w
ORCIDs: 0000-0001-8317-5831 , Hendriksen, Rene S. and Leekitcharoenphon, Pimlapas

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