Helicobacter typhlonius sp. nov., a Novel Murine Urease-Negative Helicobacter Species

Author:

Franklin Craig L.1,Gorelick Peter L.2,Riley Lela K.1,Dewhirst Floyd E.3,Livingston Robert S.1,Ward Jerrold M.4,Beckwith Catherine S.1,Fox James G.5

Affiliation:

1. Research Animal Diagnostic and Investigative Laboratory, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 652111;

2. Animal Health Diagnostic Laboratory, Laboratory Animal Sciences Program, NCI-FCRDC, Science Applications International Corporation, Frederick, Maryland 217012;

3. Forsyth Institute, Boston, Boston, Massachusetts 021153;

4. Veterinary and Tumor Pathology Section, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland 021154; and

5. Division of Comparative Medicine, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 021395

Abstract

ABSTRACT Over the past decade, several Helicobacter species have been isolated from rodents. With the advent of PCR for the diagnosis of infectious agents, it has become clear that several previously uncharacterized Helicobacter species also colonize rodents. In this report, we describe a novel urease-negative helicobacter, Helicobacter typhlonius sp. nov., which was isolated from colonies of laboratory mice independently by two laboratories. Infection of immunodeficient mice by this bacterium resulted in typhlocolitis similar to that observed with other helicobacter infections. H. typhlonius is genetically most closely related to H. hepaticus . Like H. hepaticus , it is a spiral bacterium with bipolar sheathed flagella. However, this novel species contains a large intervening sequence in its 16S rRNA gene and is biochemically distinct from H. hepaticus . Notably, H. typhlonius does not produce urease or H 2 S nor does it hydrolize indoxyl-acetate. Compared to other Helicobacter species that commonly colonize rodents, H. typhlonius was found to be less prevalent than H. hepaticus and H. rodentium but as prevalent as H. bilis. H. typhlonius joins a growing list of helicobacters that colonize mice and are capable of inducing enteric disease in various strains of immunodeficient mice.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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