Affiliation:
1. Departments of Veterinary Microbiology and Preventive Medicine
2. Veterinary Diagnostic and Production Animal Medicine
3. National Veterinary Services Laboratories, VS/APHIS/USDA, Ames, Iowa 50010
4. Veterinary Pathology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Campylobacter
infection is one of the major causes of ovine abortions worldwide. Historically,
Campylobacter fetus
subsp.
fetus
was the major cause of
Campylobacter
-associated abortion in sheep; however,
Campylobacter jejuni
is increasingly associated with sheep abortions. We examined the species distribution, genotypes, and antimicrobial susceptibilities of abortion-associated
Campylobacter
isolates obtained from multiple lambing seasons on different farms in Iowa, Idaho, South Dakota, and California. We found that
C. jejuni
has replaced
C. fetus
as the predominant
Campylobacter
species causing sheep abortion in the United States. Most strikingly, the vast majority (66 of 71) of the
C. jejuni
isolates associated with sheep abortion belong to a single genetic clone, as determined by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, multilocus sequence typing, and
cmp
gene (encoding the major outer membrane protein) sequence typing. The in vitro antimicrobial susceptibilities of these isolates to the antibiotics that are routinely used in food animal production were determined using the agar dilution test. All of the 74 isolates were susceptible to tilmicosin, florfenicol, tulathromycin, and enrofloxacin, and 97% were sensitive to tylosin. However, all were resistant to tetracyclines, the only antibiotics currently approved in the United States for the treatment of
Campylobacter
abortion in sheep. This finding suggests that feeding tetracycline for the prevention of
Campylobacter
abortions is ineffective and that other antibiotics should be used for the treatment of sheep abortions in the United States. Together, these results indicate that a single tetracycline-resistant
C. jejuni
clone has emerged as the major cause of
Campylobacter
-associated sheep abortion in the United States.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
107 articles.
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