Title: Infectious Coryza: Characterization of Bacterium
1Infectious Coryza Characterization of Bacterium
- Prof. Rob Bragg
- Dept of Microbial, Biochemical and Food
Biotechnology - University of the Free State
- Bloemfontein
- South Africa
2Infectious Coryza
- Caused by Avibacterium paragallinarum (previously
Haemophilus paragallinarum). - Causes drop in egg production in layers which can
be up to 40 - Normally bacterium requires NAD for growth. (NAD
independent isolates have been found in South
Africa since 1990 and recently in Mexico) - Different serogroups of the bacterium (A, B and C)
3NAD Independent Isolates
- First found in South Africa in 1990.
- NAD independence is plasmid mediated.
- NAD independent isolates appear to be less
virulent that wild-type strains. (demonstrated
with wild-type strains and lab produced strains). - Evidence of immune evasion by NAD independent
isolates.
4Isolation and Identification of the Bacterium
- Selection of chickens for isolation.
- Growth media and requirements.
- Isolation procedures
- Conventional identification
- PCR
- Other strains
5Selection of Chickens
6Selection of Chickens
- This is critical for isolation.
- Select birds with only very mild clinical signs.
- If birds with severe clinical signs are selected
A. paragallinarum cultures are often overgrown
by opportunistic pathogens.
7Growth Media and Requirements
- Blood Tryptose Agar plates (BTA) give best
results. - Bacteria require NAD for growth this can be
added to the medium or can be supplied through
the use of a feeder culture of Staphylococcus
aureus. - Look for typical satellitism.
- Bacteria in micro-aerophilic use candle jar for
isolation at 37C.
8Isolation Procedures
- Disinfect head.
- Make incision into the sinus cavity.
- Collect sample with sterile swab.
- Streak sample onto BTA plates.
- Inoculate with S. aureus across the inoculum.
- Incubate in a candle jar at 37C overnight.
- Bacteria only survive for 2 to 3 days.
9NAD Independent Isolates
- Same isolation procedures.
- Do not see typical satellitism.
- Colonies will grow on plates without the feed
culture on passage of the bacteria. - Colonies very similar to Ornithobacterium
rhinotracheale.
10Identification
- For diagnostic purposes isolation of bacterium
showing satellitism from birds with clinical
signs is sufficient. - Identification options include biochemical tests
or PCR. - PCR tests are preferable and works well. Can be
done directly on colonies no need to first
isolate the DNA.
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3
lane 11742 lane 2 46-C3 lane 3 Marker
??500bp
Fig.1 1 Agarose gel of the PCR amplification of
A. paragallinarum reference strains1742,
46-C3. Amplification of the DNA resulted in a
single band of ?500bp.
12Identification
- There are other NAD requiring organisms which can
be isolated from chickens the so called
Haemophilus avium strains. - Reclassified into Pasteurella avium, P. volantium
and Pasteurella type A species. - Regarded as non-pathogenic.
- Can be found quite frequently.
13Identification
- Biochemical tests are possible.
- Must add sterile 0.5 NaCl, 1 sterile chicken
serum and 0.025 NAD to basal media for
carbohydrate fermentation tests.
14Identification
Sugar A. para. P. avium P. vol Past
Galactose -
Mannitol -
Sorbitol - -
Xylose - (v) -
15Identification
- NAD independent strain the same a NAD dependent
A. paragallinarum. - PCR test detects both variations.
- Biochemical tests are the same.
- Serological tests are the same.
- Only NAD dependence differs.
16Serogroups and Serotyping
- Plate agglutination test three serotypes (A, B
and C). - Serotyping scheme based on ability to agglutinate
Gluteraldehyde fixed red blood cells. Three
groups found to be the same as serotypes found
by plate agglutination test. - Three serogroups (A, B and C)
17Serogroups
- Serogroups currently sub-divided into 9 different
serovars (A-1 to A-4 B-1 C-1 to C-4). - Serotyping to serogroup level is relatively
straight forward HA and HI tests. - Serotyping to serovar level is difficult (also
with HA and HI but can be subjective).
18Serogroups
Serogroup Serovar Isolate
A A-1 0083
A A-2 HP-90
A A-3 E3-C
A A-3 HP-14
B B-1 0222
C C-1 H-18
C C-2 Modesto
C C-3 SA-3
C C-4 HP-18
19Serogroups
- Evidence that different serovars are
geographically isolated (C-3 in Southern Africa,
C-4 in Australia). - Evidence of new serovars in other countries
(South America). (Possibly two new serovar B
strains, 1 new serovar C strain and one or two
new serovar A strains).
20Cross Protection
- No cross protection across serogroups.
- Good cross protection between serogroup A
strains. - Good to poor cross protection with serogroup C
strains. - Cross protection in serogroup C is highly strain
dependent.
21Cross Protection
- Important to know serogroup and serovar of
strains in a country for the selection of
vaccine. - Serotyping to serovar level with HA and HI test
is difficult. - Need alternative methods for serotyping
molecular based test would be preferable.
22Molecular Serotyping
- Develop a serotyping scheme based on
haemagglutinin gene of A. paragallinarum (Current
research project). - Haemagglutinin gene has been sequenced.
- Ideal situation would be to have serovar specific
PCR tests specific primer sets for each
serovar. - Alternative PCR full gene and do RFLP analysis
get serovar specific fingerprint
23Restriction Digests Patterns
24Enterobacterial Repetitive Intergenic
Consensus-based PCR
- ERIC-PCR. (Current research project).
- Use long sequence primers and low annealing
temperature. - Amplification of regions in bacterial genome.
- Result in genetic fingerprint different
patterns found for different reference strains. - Need to investigate significance to cross
protection.
25Challenge Models
- Most challenge models involve the intra-sinus
injection of challenge bacteria into all birds in
the group. - Record the number of birds showing clinical
signs after 3 to 5 days. - Do bacterial re-isolation.
- Calculate protection levels.
26Problems with Challenge Model
- Not a natural route of exposure.
- Always see clinical signs in birds the first few
days after injection of challenge bacteria,
irrespective of the level of protection in the
birds. - What do you do with these clinical signs?
- Need for a new challenge model.
27New Challenge Model
28Challenge Model
- A total of 10 chickens in adjoining cages per
test. - Challenge one bird in the middle and allow for
natural spread. - Recorded clinical signs daily.
- Score clinical signs.
- Construct a disease profile using mean daily
disease scores.
29Clinical scores
30Challenge Model Disease Profile
31New Challenge Model
- Allows for easy comparison between different
vaccines, virulence of strains, efficacy of
treatments etc. - Allows for statistical analysis of the difference
between the disease levels in vaccinated and
unvaccinated chickens.
32Virulence of Different Isolates
- Virulence of the four different South African
serovars was tested using the challenge model. - Unvaccinated commercial layers were used.
- Groups of chickens were challenged with each of
the different serovars.
33Virulence of SA Isolates
34Virulence of SA Isolates
- It was found that serovar C-3 is highly virulent.
- Serovar C-2 is less virulent than serovar C-3,
but is substantially more virulent than serovars
A-1 or B-1.
35Conclusions
- Knowing the serogroup and serovars of the
isolates which occur in a country is important. - Developed a new challenge model which allows for
statistical comparisons. - Serovar C-3 has been shown to be highly virulent.
36Thank you