Schulz Jochen, Dumke Jessika, Hinse Dennis, Dreier Jens, Habig Christin, Kemper Nicole
Institute for Animal Hygiene, Animal Welfare and Farm Animal Behaviour, University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Foundation, Hannover, Germany.
Institute for Laboratory and Transfusion Medicine, Ruhr University of Bochum, Bad Oeynhausen, Germany.
PLoS One. 2015 Dec 10;10(12):e0144412. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144412. eCollection 2015.
Streptococcus gallolyticus subspecies gallolyticus (S. gallolyticus) can colonise the gastrointestinal tract of humans and animals and is known to cause similar infections in both humans and animals. Data about the spread or prevalence in farm animals are missing. In this study, Trypton Soya Agar was modified to a selective medium enabling the isolation and quantification of S. gallolyticus from faecal samples. The bacterium was observed in 82 out of 91 faecal samples obtained from 18 different organic turkey flocks. The prevalence of shedding birds was estimated by the number of positive fresh droppings and reached up to 100% on most farms. Furthermore, for the first time S. gallolyticus was quantified in faeces from poultry flocks. The median of colony forming units (CFU) per gramme faeces was 3.6 x 10(5) CFU/g. Typing of one isolate from each positive faecal sample by multilocus sequence typing delivered 24 sequence types (STs). Most of the isolates belonged to the clonal complex CC58. The same STs of this complex were detected in up to six different flocks. Partly, these flocks were located in various regions and stocked with varying breeding lines. Regarding the biochemical profiles of the same STs from different farms, the results did not contradict a spread of specific STs in the organic turkey production. Moreover, checking the pubMLST database revealed that STs found in this study were also found in other animal species and in humans. The high detection rate and the number of S. gallolyticus in turkey faeces indicate that this bacterium probably belongs to the common microbiota of the gastrointestinal tract of turkeys from organic flocks. Furthermore, the findings of this study support the suggestion of a possible interspecies transmission.
解脲链球菌解脲亚种(S. gallolyticus)可定植于人和动物的胃肠道,已知在人和动物中都会引起类似感染。关于其在农场动物中的传播或流行情况的数据尚缺。在本研究中,将胰蛋白胨大豆琼脂改良为选择性培养基,以便从粪便样本中分离和解脲链球菌并进行定量。在从18个不同的有机火鸡群中获得的91份粪便样本中,有82份检测到了该细菌。通过阳性新鲜粪便的数量估计了排菌鸟类的流行率,大多数农场高达100%。此外,首次对家禽群粪便中的解脲链球菌进行了定量。每克粪便中菌落形成单位(CFU)的中位数为3.6×10⁵ CFU/g。通过多位点序列分型对每个阳性粪便样本中的一个分离株进行分型,得到了24种序列类型(STs)。大多数分离株属于克隆复合体CC58。在多达六个不同的鸡群中检测到了该复合体的相同STs。部分鸡群位于不同地区,饲养着不同的品系。关于来自不同农场的相同STs的生化特征,结果并不与特定STs在有机火鸡生产中的传播相矛盾。此外,检查pubMLST数据库发现,本研究中发现的STs在其他动物物种和人类中也有发现。火鸡粪便中解脲链球菌的高检出率和数量表明,这种细菌可能属于有机鸡群火鸡胃肠道的常见微生物群。此外,本研究结果支持了可能存在种间传播的观点。