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Pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with Chlamydia abortus variant strains LLG and POS

This study investigated the pathogenesis of two variant strains (LLG and POS) of Chlamydia abortus, in comparison to a typical wild-type strain (S26/3) which is known to be responsible for late term abortion in small ruminants. Challenge with the three strains at mid-gestation resulted in similar pr...

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Autores principales: Livingstone, Morag, Wheelhouse, Nicholas, Ensor, Hannah, Rocchi, Mara, Maley, Stephen, Aitchison, Kevin, Wattegedera, Sean, Wilson, Kim, Sait, Michelle, Siarkou, Victoria, Vretou, Evangelia, Entrican, Gary, Dagleish, Mark, Longbottom, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5426687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28494018
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0177653
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author Livingstone, Morag
Wheelhouse, Nicholas
Ensor, Hannah
Rocchi, Mara
Maley, Stephen
Aitchison, Kevin
Wattegedera, Sean
Wilson, Kim
Sait, Michelle
Siarkou, Victoria
Vretou, Evangelia
Entrican, Gary
Dagleish, Mark
Longbottom, David
author_facet Livingstone, Morag
Wheelhouse, Nicholas
Ensor, Hannah
Rocchi, Mara
Maley, Stephen
Aitchison, Kevin
Wattegedera, Sean
Wilson, Kim
Sait, Michelle
Siarkou, Victoria
Vretou, Evangelia
Entrican, Gary
Dagleish, Mark
Longbottom, David
author_sort Livingstone, Morag
collection PubMed
description This study investigated the pathogenesis of two variant strains (LLG and POS) of Chlamydia abortus, in comparison to a typical wild-type strain (S26/3) which is known to be responsible for late term abortion in small ruminants. Challenge with the three strains at mid-gestation resulted in similar pregnancy outcomes, with abortion occurring in approximately 50–60% of ewes with the mean gestational lengths also being similar. However, differences were observed in the severity of placental pathology, with infection appearing milder for strain LLG, which was reflected in the lower number of organisms shed in vaginal swabs post-partum and less gross pathology and organisms present in placental smears. Results for strain POS were somewhat different than LLG with a more focal restriction of infection observed. Post-abortion antibody responses revealed prominent differences in seropositivity to the major outer membrane protein (MOMP) present in elementary body (EB) preparations under denaturing conditions, most notably with anti-LLG and anti-POS convalescent sera where there was no or reduced detection of MOMP present in EBs derived from the three strains. These results and additional analysis of whole EB and chlamydial outer membrane complex preparations suggest that there are conformational differences in MOMP for the three strains. Overall, the results suggest that gross placental pathology and clinical outcome is not indicative of bacterial colonization and the severity of infection. The results also highlight potential conformational differences in MOMP epitopes that perhaps impact on disease diagnosis and the development of new vaccines.
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spelling pubmed-54266872017-05-25 Pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with Chlamydia abortus variant strains LLG and POS Livingstone, Morag Wheelhouse, Nicholas Ensor, Hannah Rocchi, Mara Maley, Stephen Aitchison, Kevin Wattegedera, Sean Wilson, Kim Sait, Michelle Siarkou, Victoria Vretou, Evangelia Entrican, Gary Dagleish, Mark Longbottom, David PLoS One Research Article This study investigated the pathogenesis of two variant strains (LLG and POS) of Chlamydia abortus, in comparison to a typical wild-type strain (S26/3) which is known to be responsible for late term abortion in small ruminants. Challenge with the three strains at mid-gestation resulted in similar pregnancy outcomes, with abortion occurring in approximately 50–60% of ewes with the mean gestational lengths also being similar. However, differences were observed in the severity of placental pathology, with infection appearing milder for strain LLG, which was reflected in the lower number of organisms shed in vaginal swabs post-partum and less gross pathology and organisms present in placental smears. Results for strain POS were somewhat different than LLG with a more focal restriction of infection observed. Post-abortion antibody responses revealed prominent differences in seropositivity to the major outer membrane protein (MOMP) present in elementary body (EB) preparations under denaturing conditions, most notably with anti-LLG and anti-POS convalescent sera where there was no or reduced detection of MOMP present in EBs derived from the three strains. These results and additional analysis of whole EB and chlamydial outer membrane complex preparations suggest that there are conformational differences in MOMP for the three strains. Overall, the results suggest that gross placental pathology and clinical outcome is not indicative of bacterial colonization and the severity of infection. The results also highlight potential conformational differences in MOMP epitopes that perhaps impact on disease diagnosis and the development of new vaccines. Public Library of Science 2017-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC5426687/ /pubmed/28494018 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0177653 Text en © 2017 Livingstone et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Livingstone, Morag
Wheelhouse, Nicholas
Ensor, Hannah
Rocchi, Mara
Maley, Stephen
Aitchison, Kevin
Wattegedera, Sean
Wilson, Kim
Sait, Michelle
Siarkou, Victoria
Vretou, Evangelia
Entrican, Gary
Dagleish, Mark
Longbottom, David
Pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with Chlamydia abortus variant strains LLG and POS
title Pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with Chlamydia abortus variant strains LLG and POS
title_full Pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with Chlamydia abortus variant strains LLG and POS
title_fullStr Pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with Chlamydia abortus variant strains LLG and POS
title_full_unstemmed Pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with Chlamydia abortus variant strains LLG and POS
title_short Pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with Chlamydia abortus variant strains LLG and POS
title_sort pathogenic outcome following experimental infection of sheep with chlamydia abortus variant strains llg and pos
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5426687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28494018
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0177653
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