Isolation of a novel ‘atypical’ Brucella strain from a bluespotted ribbontail ray (Taeniura lymma)
A pleomorphic Gram-negative, motile coccobacillus was isolated from the gills of a wild-caught bluespotted ribbontail ray after its sudden death during quarantine. Strain 141012304 was observed to grow aerobically, to be clearly positive for cytochrome oxidase, catalase, urease and was initially ide...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 2017-02, Vol.110 (2), p.221-234 |
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Zusammenfassung: | A pleomorphic Gram-negative, motile coccobacillus was isolated from the gills of a wild-caught bluespotted ribbontail ray after its sudden death during quarantine. Strain 141012304 was observed to grow aerobically, to be clearly positive for cytochrome oxidase, catalase, urease and was initially identified as “
Brucella melitensis
” or “
Ochrobactrum anthropi
” by Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry and VITEK2-compact
®
, respectively. Affiliation to the genus
Brucella
was confirmed by
bcsp31
and IS
711
PCR as well as by
Brucella
species-specific multiplex PCR, therein displaying a characteristic banding pattern recently described for
Brucella
strains obtained from amphibian hosts. Likewise, based on
recA
sequencing, strain 141012304 was found to form a separate lineage, within the so called ‘atypical’
Brucella,
consisting of genetically more distantly related strains. The closest similarity was detected to brucellae, which have recently been isolated from edible bull frogs. Subsequent next generation genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis confirmed that the ray strain represents a novel
Brucella
lineage within the atypical group of
Brucella
and in vicinity to
Brucella inopinata
and
Brucella
strain BO2, both isolated from human patients. This is the first report of a natural
Brucella
infection in a saltwater fish extending the host range of this medically important genus. |
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ISSN: | 0003-6072 1572-9699 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10482-016-0792-4 |