Author:
BINNS S. H.,SPEAKMAN A. J.,DAWSON S.,BENNETT M.,GASKELL R. M.,HART C. A.
Abstract
A collection (164) of isolates of Bordetella bronchiseptica
made predominantly from cats (132)
but also from dogs (15), pigs (12) and other species was examined by pulsed
field gel
electrophoresis following macrorestriction digestion with XbaI.
Each
isolate was analysed twice
and the patterns were entirely reproducible. The isolates fell into 17
different strains (>3 bands different) and within strains there were
numerous subtypes. Feline isolates fell into 12 of
the 17 strains. In general, cats housed together had similar or identical
strains and subtypes of
B. bronchiseptica. There was no difference in the PFGE patterns
of isolates made from carrier
cats and those from cats with respiratory disease. Isolates from pigs and
dogs were in general
similar to the feline isolates and there was no great evidence for
species specificity. The PFGE
pattern of feline and canine isolates were more related to whether the
animals were housed
together rather than whether they came from dogs or cats.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
31 articles.
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