Molecular characterisation of Mycoplasma bovis isolates from consecutive episodes of respiratory disease on Dutch veal farms
Mycoplasma bovis infections are wide spread in veal calf farms and a major contributor to respiratory disease. M. bovis are genetically diverse. It is unclear how this diversity influences the virulence and epidemiology of infections on veal calf farms over time. Therefore, the aim of this study was...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Veterinary microbiology 2024-11, Vol.298, p.110221, Article 110221 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Mycoplasma bovis infections are wide spread in veal calf farms and a major contributor to respiratory disease. M. bovis are genetically diverse. It is unclear how this diversity influences the virulence and epidemiology of infections on veal calf farms over time. Therefore, the aim of this study was to follow the genetic composition of M. bovis isolates on veal farms over time in a fattening round and combine this with presence of disease and presence of other respiratory pathogens. For this, M. bovis isolates were obtained from healthy and diseased calves from ten different farms at different episodes of respiratory disease in the same groups in one fattening round. A new episode of respiratory disease was defined by the practitioner based on clinical diagnosis at least 7 days after end of a previous metaphylactic treatment. These isolates were sequenced using Illumina sequencing and analysed. This resulted in 148 sequenced isolates. The isolates belonged to 9 different clusters and to the known MLST sequence types ST4 (n=9), ST6 (n=2), ST7 (n=1), ST8 (n=1), ST21 (n=32), ST29 (n=30), ST32 (n=1), ST100 (n=36), ST122 (n=17) and ST135 (n=4), and new sequence types ST222 (n=8), ST223 (n=1), ST224 (n=5) and ST225 (n=1). Major sequence types are linked to types, found in other European countries. All farms showed presence of two or more different clusters, however with different distribution patterns. Farms did not show a major shift in type distribution over time. There was a relationship between M. bovis type and region of origin of the calves and the types differed with regards of presence of variable membrane surface lipoprotein (Vsp) genes. Types were not related to disease status of the calves or presence of other major respiratory pathogens. This study underlines the complexity of M. bovis infection on veal calf farms with persistent presence of different types together in both healthy and diseased calves with or without other respiratory pathogens. Prevention of introduction of M. bovis and biosecurity measures combined with optimisation of calf resilience should have priority.
•Veal calf farms harbor different M. bovis sequence types at the same time but the diversity differs per farm.•Most isolates belonged to sequence types with already shown wide distribution, but four new sequence types were detected.•Relative occurrence of M. bovis sequence types at veal calf farms doesn’t change with different episodes of disease.•The same individual veal calf ca |
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ISSN: | 0378-1135 1873-2542 1873-2542 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.vetmic.2024.110221 |