Affiliation:
1. Respiratory Diseases of Livestock Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Ames, Iowa 50010
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bordetella avium
is an avian respiratory disease pathogen responsible for substantial economic losses to the turkey industry. The inability to distinguish isolates has hampered outbreak investigations and prevents a complete understanding of transmission mechanisms. Isolates of
Bordetella hinzii
, often referred to as
B. avium
-like or as
Alcaligenes faecalis
type II prior to 1995, have also been acquired from the respiratory tracts of diseased poultry but are not believed to be pathogenic for birds. Therefore, differentiating between
B. avium
and
B. hinzii
is of importance for veterinary diagnostic laboratories. It was recently reported that both
Pvu
II ribotyping and
Hin
fI/
Dde
I restriction endonuclease analysis (REA) show promise for distinguishing isolates of
B. avium
and
B. hinzii
. Here we compare the ability of these techniques to discern inter- and intraspecies differences. While both approaches distinguished numerous types within a species, only REA was sufficiently discriminatory for routine use as an epidemiologic tool. Both techniques clearly distinguish between
B. avium
and
B. hinzii
, although the results of ribotyping are more easily interpreted. Ribotyping and REA identified numerous, previously unrecognized
B. hinzii
strains from a collection of bordetella isolates, including one acquired from a rabbit. This is the first report of
B. hinzii
isolation from a nonhuman mammalian species. At least some of the newly recognized
B. hinzii
isolates have been previously reported to cause disease in poults, suggesting that the pathogenicity of this agent for poultry should be more rigorously examined.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
23 articles.
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