Experimental challenge of red deer with Mycobacterium avium

1978 ◽  
Vol 102 (22) ◽  
pp. 484-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Orr ◽  
A. Hunter ◽  
T. Brand ◽  
D. Owen
2008 ◽  
Vol 53 (No. 8) ◽  
pp. 445-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Moravkova ◽  
I. Trcka ◽  
J. Lamka ◽  
I. Pavlik

A mixed infection with <i>Mycobacterium avium</i> subsp. <i>paratuberculosis</i> (<i>MAP</i>) and <i>Mycobacterium avium</i> subsp. <i>hominissuis</i> (<i>MAH</i>) in one naturally infected red deer stag from a game park is described. The animal was euthanized because of symptoms of poor condition, weight loss and chronic diarrhoea. In spite of that, pathological lesions were observed only in the mesenteric lymph nodes, which were five to ten times enlarged with confluent caseous granulomas of 1 to 10 mm in size. Mycobacteria were isolated from all studied samples: a mixed infection of <i>MAP</i> and <i>MAH</i> was confirmed by multiplex PCR for the detection of IS <i>900</i>, IS<i>901</i>1, IS<i>1245</i> and <i>dnaJ</i>. MAP</i> of the identical IS<i>900</i> <i>BstE</i>II RFLP type C1 was isolated from all tissue samples and faeces. <i>MAH</i> isolates were detected in six examined tissue samples, including three mesenteric lymph nodes with caseous granulomas. Only minor differences in the band numbers and position of four different IS<i>1245</i> <i>Pvu</i>II RFLP patterns of <i>MAH</i> isolates were found. It follows from these results that red deer may potentially be infected with <i>MAH</i>, when a <i>MAP</i> infection is under way.


2012 ◽  
Vol 192 (3) ◽  
pp. 544-546 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Carta ◽  
M.P. Martin-Hernando ◽  
M. Boadella ◽  
I.G. Fernández-de-Mera ◽  
A. Balseiro ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 844-851
Author(s):  
Mitchell V. Palmer ◽  
Carly Kanipe ◽  
Rebecca Cox ◽  
Suelee Robbe-Austerman ◽  
Tyler C. Thacker

Paratuberculosis (Johne’s disease) is caused by Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis (MAP), and affects both domestic and wild ruminants, including cattle, goats, sheep, and deer. In cattle, most infections occur during calfhood followed by a prolonged incubation period of 1–2 y or more before cows shed culturable numbers of MAP bacilli in their feces. As disease progresses, infected animals develop protein-losing enteropathy, intractable diarrhea, and weight loss. In a cohort of 32 clinically normal deer from a herd with a history of periodic clinical paratuberculosis, we found that subclinical infection was characterized by high rates of infection, common involvement of mesenteric lymph nodes, minimal lesion formation, few intralesional acid-fast bacilli, and low-level fecal shedding of MAP. The characteristics of subclinical paratuberculosis in white-tailed deer resemble those of cattle and red deer, although microscopic lesions were less common in subclinical deer than reported for subclinical cattle, and we did not see necrotizing granulomas as described in subclinical red deer and elk.


2018 ◽  
Vol 217 ◽  
pp. 167-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessia Galiero ◽  
Simone Leo ◽  
Chiara Garbarino ◽  
Norma Arrigoni ◽  
Simone Russo ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 190 ◽  
pp. 106184
Author(s):  
Hernán Santiago Hermida ◽  
Silvia Colavecchia ◽  
Bárbara Fernández ◽  
Jorge Suhevic ◽  
Marcela Martinez Vivot ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 53 (No. 9) ◽  
pp. 510-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kopecna ◽  
I. Parmova ◽  
L. Dvorska-Bartosova ◽  
M. Moravkova ◽  
V. Babak ◽  
...  

The objectives of this study were the determination of <I>Mycobacterium avium</I> subsp. <I>paratuberculosis</I> (MAP) distribution in organs of farmed red deer (<I>Cervus elaphus</I>) and the investigation of its vertical and horizontal spread among animals, using serology, cultivation and the standardized IS<I>900</I> RFLP method. During the three year of study, the production of antibodies for <I>MAP</I> increased from 0 in the first year to 7.7% (positive) and 0 to 88.5% (dubious) in the third year of the study. The first performed global culture examination of faecal samples from 28 animals was negative for <I>MAP</I>. In the three subsequent examinations of animals, the following positivity was found: 5.9%, 34.6%, and 36.8%, respectively. In the last year of the study, clinical signs such as diarrhoea were observed in four animals. The animals with clinical symptoms and those that were found to be infected with <I>MAP</I> by serology or faecal culture were euthanized. <I>MAP</I> was isolated from the intestinal tract and pulmonary lymph (tracheobronchial or mediastinal lymph nodes) nodes of all studied animals. Apart of this <I>MAP</I> was also isolated from reproductive organs, such as the mammary gland, milk, uterus, amniotic fluid and testicles. Application of the IS<I>900</I> RFLP method revealed that the prevailing <I>MAP</I> isolates were of RFLP type B-C1; this profile was found in all types of tissue samples as well as in faeces, milk and amniotic fluid. In five animals a mixed infection of two profiles B-C1 and B-C5 or B-C1 and B-C16 was detected.


2000 ◽  
Vol 68 (3) ◽  
pp. 1620-1625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin G. Mackintosh ◽  
Tariq Qureshi ◽  
Ken Waldrup ◽  
Robert E. Labes ◽  
Ken G. Dodds ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Tuberculosis (Tb) caused by Mycobacterium bovis is a worldwide threat to livestock and humans. One control strategy is to breed livestock that are more resistant to Mycobacterium bovis. In a 3-year heritability study 6 farmed red deer stags were selected from 39 on the basis of their differing responses to experimental challenge via the tonsillar sac with approximately 500 CFU of M. bovis. Two stags remained uninfected, two were moderately affected, and two developed serious spreading Tb. Seventy offspring, bred from these six stags by artificial insemination using stored semen, were similarly challenged withM. bovis. The offspring showed patterns of response toM. bovis challenge similar to those of their sires, providing evidence for a strong genetic basis to resistance to Tb, with an estimated heritability of 0.48 (standard error, 0.096; P< 0.01). This is the first time the heritability of Tb resistance in domestic livestock has been measured. The breeding of selection lines of resistant and susceptible deer will provide an ideal model to study the mechanisms of Tb resistance in a ruminant and could provide an additional strategy for reducing the number and severity of outbreaks of Tb in farmed deer herds. Laboratory studies to identify genetic and immunological markers for resistance to Tb are under way. Preliminary studies showed no associations between NRAMP or DRB genes and resistance to Tb in deer. Patterns of immune responses seen in resistant animals suggest that both innate and acquired pathways of immunity are necessary to produce the resistant phenotype.


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