Singer R S, Jeffrey J S, Carpenter T E, Cooke C L, Chin R P, Atwill E R, Hirsh D C
Department of Medicine and Epidemiology, University of California, Davis 95616, USA.
Avian Dis. 1999 Oct-Dec;43(4):756-62.
Avian cellulitis in broiler chickens is characterized by subcutaneous lesions that result in economic losses because of the partial or complete condemnation of the carcasses at processing. Escherichia coli is the primary causative agent of this condition. Previous research with a biotyping system found that the E. coli of cellulitis origin were unique to each ranch, suggesting that these E. coli were endemic within the ranch environment. The objective of our study was to analyze the genetic variability of E. coli isolates associated with cellulitis. We analyzed the genetic relatedness of the isolates in relation to the houses, ranches, and complexes in which the broilers were grown. This analysis enabled us to assess the spatial heterogeneity, or genetic diversity on a spatial scale, of the isolates. Forty-nine broilers with cellulitis lesions were necropsied. These broilers came from six houses on four ranches on three complexes that had been placed with chicks from the same hatchery within a 2-wk period. Isolates of E. coli from the lesions were DNA fingerprinted by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Relatedness among isolates was determined with the Dice coefficient and an unweighted pair group method with average linkages cluster analysis. The complexes possessed isolates with a variety of DNA fingerprints, yet each complex appeared to have isolates with a unique set of DNA fingerprints. Isolates from the same complex tended to form clusters with similarity coefficients greater than 90%. Isolates from different complexes were genetically distinct. This heterogeneity at the level of the complex suggests that isolates were not disseminated from a source common to the complexes. The spatial heterogeneity of the E. coli isolates in this study implies an endemic population of cellulitis-associated E. coli exists in the broiler house environment.
肉鸡的禽蜂窝织炎以皮下损伤为特征,由于在加工时胴体部分或全部被判不合格,从而导致经济损失。大肠杆菌是这种病症的主要病原体。先前使用生物分型系统的研究发现,蜂窝织炎源的大肠杆菌在每个养殖场都是独特的,这表明这些大肠杆菌在养殖场环境中是地方性流行的。我们研究的目的是分析与蜂窝织炎相关的大肠杆菌分离株的遗传变异性。我们分析了分离株与饲养肉鸡的鸡舍、养殖场和建筑群之间的遗传相关性。这种分析使我们能够评估分离株的空间异质性,即在空间尺度上的遗传多样性。对49只患有蜂窝织炎损伤的肉鸡进行了尸检。这些肉鸡来自三个建筑群中四个养殖场的六个鸡舍,这些鸡舍在两周内饲养了来自同一孵化场的雏鸡。通过脉冲场凝胶电泳对损伤部位的大肠杆菌分离株进行DNA指纹分析。用Dice系数和不加权配对组平均连锁聚类分析法确定分离株之间的相关性。这些建筑群拥有具有各种DNA指纹的分离株,但每个建筑群似乎都有一组独特的DNA指纹的分离株。来自同一建筑群的分离株倾向于形成相似系数大于90%的聚类。来自不同建筑群的分离株在遗传上是不同的。这种在建筑群水平上的异质性表明,分离株不是从建筑群共有的来源传播的。本研究中大肠杆菌分离株的空间异质性意味着在肉鸡舍环境中存在与蜂窝织炎相关的地方性大肠杆菌种群。