Appleyard Greg D, Clark Edward G
Department of Veterinary Pathology, Western College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N 5B4.
J Clin Microbiol. 2002 Jul;40(7):2425-30. doi: 10.1128/JCM.40.7.2425-2430.2002.
Three cases of feline atypical mycobacteriosis from different geographical regions in North America were characterized by large clusters of filamentous bacteria visible on hematoxylin-and-eosin-stained tissue sections. PCR amplification demonstrated the presence of Mycobacterium-specific nucleic acid in samples of skin lesions from these cases. PCR-assisted cloning and DNA sequence analysis of a 541-bp length of the Mycobacterium 16S rRNA gene generated DNA sequences which were >95% identical, suggesting that the three isolates were closely related. Two of the sequences were 99% identical and may represent the same species. Alignment with comparable 16S rRNA gene sequences from 66 Mycobacterium species and partially characterized isolates highlighted similarities (>94%) with Mycobacterium bohemicum, Mycobacterium haemophilum, Mycobacterium ulcerans, Mycobacterium avium subsp. avium, and isolate IWGMT 90242. Parsimony analysis of sequence data suggested relatedness to M. leprae. Significant molecular genetic and pathobiological differences between these three similar isolates and other known species of mycobacteria suggested that the organisms may not have been described previously and that these cases may represent a new form of mycobacterial disease in cats. We suggest the term "Mycobacterium visibilis" to describe the organism from which the two nearly identical sequences were obtained.
来自北美不同地理区域的三例猫非典型分枝杆菌病病例的特征是,在苏木精-伊红染色的组织切片上可见大量丝状细菌簇。聚合酶链反应(PCR)扩增显示这些病例皮肤病变样本中存在分枝杆菌特异性核酸。对分枝杆菌16S rRNA基因541 bp长度进行PCR辅助克隆和DNA序列分析,得到的DNA序列相似度>95%,表明这三株分离菌密切相关。其中两个序列相似度为99%,可能代表同一物种。与66种分枝杆菌以及部分特征明确的分离株的可比16S rRNA基因序列比对,发现与波希米亚分枝杆菌、嗜血性分枝杆菌、溃疡分枝杆菌、鸟分枝杆菌鸟亚种以及分离株IWGMT 90242有相似性(>94%)。序列数据的简约分析表明与麻风分枝杆菌有关。这三株相似的分离菌与其他已知分枝杆菌物种之间存在显著的分子遗传学和病理生物学差异,表明这些微生物可能以前未被描述过,这些病例可能代表猫分枝杆菌病的一种新形式。我们建议用“可见分枝杆菌”这一术语来描述获得两个几乎相同序列的微生物。