Actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas

The genera Actinomyces and Schaalia, both members of the bacterial order Actinomycetales, include relevant infectious agents that cause abscesses in small ruminants and New World camelids. Due to the high diversity of the Actinomycetales, detection of undescribed members of this order is to be expec...

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Main Authors: R Sting, A Schwalm, M Contzen, M Roller, J Rau
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Schlütersche Fachmedien GmbH 2020-07-01
Series:Berliner und Münchener Tierärztliche Wochenschrift
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.2376/1439-0299-2020-6
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spelling doaj-c46103d63c3d4c2b9a8b124eb15e4de92021-09-10T19:59:42ZdeuSchlütersche Fachmedien GmbHBerliner und Münchener Tierärztliche Wochenschrift1439-02992020-07-0113310.2376/1439-0299-2020-6Actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas R StingA SchwalmM ContzenM RollerJ RauThe genera Actinomyces and Schaalia, both members of the bacterial order Actinomycetales, include relevant infectious agents that cause abscesses in small ruminants and New World camelids. Due to the high diversity of the Actinomycetales, detection of undescribed members of this order is to be expected. Novel actinomycetes species were cultivated from a goat, a llama and two alpacas suffering from abscesses with suspected caseous lymphadenitis (CLA). Analyses carried out on these isolates using MALDI-TOF MS and 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed actinomycetes, presumably belonging to the bacterial genera Actinomyces and Schaalia. The data suggest that the caprine isolate is a undescribed Actinomyces species, while the isolates originating from a llama and two alpacas show a close relationship to each other within a unique Schaalia cluster, suggesting a host-adapted novel Schaalia species. Both methods proved equally suitable for reliable identification of known and of undescribed Actinomyces and Schaalia species. This study contributes to extending our knowledge about novel species belonging to the bacterial family of Actinomycetaceae (actinomycetes) associated with abscesses in goats and New World camelids. Precise identification of actinomycetes at species level is of high relevance in veterinary practice with regard to differentiation from caseous lymphadenitis and assessment of treatment success.https://dx.doi.org/10.2376/1439-0299-2020-6small ruminantNew World camelidspseudotuberculosisActinomycesActinomycetesActinomycetaceaeSchaalia
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R Sting
A Schwalm
M Contzen
M Roller
J Rau
spellingShingle R Sting
A Schwalm
M Contzen
M Roller
J Rau
Actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas
Berliner und Münchener Tierärztliche Wochenschrift
small ruminant
New World camelids
pseudotuberculosis
Actinomyces
Actinomycetes
Actinomycetaceae
Schaalia
author_facet R Sting
A Schwalm
M Contzen
M Roller
J Rau
author_sort R Sting
title Actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas
title_short Actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas
title_full Actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas
title_fullStr Actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas
title_full_unstemmed Actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas
title_sort actinomycetes associated with abscess formation in a goat, a llama and two alpacas
publisher Schlütersche Fachmedien GmbH
series Berliner und Münchener Tierärztliche Wochenschrift
issn 1439-0299
publishDate 2020-07-01
description The genera Actinomyces and Schaalia, both members of the bacterial order Actinomycetales, include relevant infectious agents that cause abscesses in small ruminants and New World camelids. Due to the high diversity of the Actinomycetales, detection of undescribed members of this order is to be expected. Novel actinomycetes species were cultivated from a goat, a llama and two alpacas suffering from abscesses with suspected caseous lymphadenitis (CLA). Analyses carried out on these isolates using MALDI-TOF MS and 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed actinomycetes, presumably belonging to the bacterial genera Actinomyces and Schaalia. The data suggest that the caprine isolate is a undescribed Actinomyces species, while the isolates originating from a llama and two alpacas show a close relationship to each other within a unique Schaalia cluster, suggesting a host-adapted novel Schaalia species. Both methods proved equally suitable for reliable identification of known and of undescribed Actinomyces and Schaalia species. This study contributes to extending our knowledge about novel species belonging to the bacterial family of Actinomycetaceae (actinomycetes) associated with abscesses in goats and New World camelids. Precise identification of actinomycetes at species level is of high relevance in veterinary practice with regard to differentiation from caseous lymphadenitis and assessment of treatment success.
topic small ruminant
New World camelids
pseudotuberculosis
Actinomyces
Actinomycetes
Actinomycetaceae
Schaalia
url https://dx.doi.org/10.2376/1439-0299-2020-6
work_keys_str_mv AT rsting actinomycetesassociatedwithabscessformationinagoatallamaandtwoalpacas
AT aschwalm actinomycetesassociatedwithabscessformationinagoatallamaandtwoalpacas
AT mcontzen actinomycetesassociatedwithabscessformationinagoatallamaandtwoalpacas
AT mroller actinomycetesassociatedwithabscessformationinagoatallamaandtwoalpacas
AT jrau actinomycetesassociatedwithabscessformationinagoatallamaandtwoalpacas
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