HAYATI Journal of Biosciences
Vol. 20 No. 4 (2013): December 2013

The Comparison of Streptococcus agalactiae Isolated from Fish and Bovine using Multilocus Sequence Typing

ANGELA MARIANA LUSIASTUTI (Research Institute of Freshwater Aquaculture, Jalan Sempur 1, Bogor 16154, Indonesia)
HELGA SEEGER (Landesbetrieb Hessisches Landeslabor, Schubert Straße 60, Haus 13, 35396 Gießen, Germany)
AGUSTIN INDRAWATI (Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Bogor Agricultural University, Darmaga Campus, Bogor 16680, Indonesia)
MICHAEL ZSCHÖCK (Landesbetrieb Hessisches Landeslabor, Schubert Straße 60, Haus 13, 35396 Gießen, Germany)



Article Info

Publish Date
31 Dec 2013

Abstract

Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) has greater utility for determining the recent ancestral lineage and the relatedness of individual strains. Group B streptococci (GBS) is one of the major causes of subclinical mastitis of dairy cattle in several countries. GBS also sporadically causes epizootic infections in fish. The aim of this study was to compare the evolutionary lineage of fish and bovine isolates in relation to the S. agalactiae global population as a whole by comparing the MLST profiles. Twenty S. agalactiae isolates were obtained from dairy cattle and fish. PCR products were amplified with seven different oligonucleotide primer pairs designed from the NEM316 GBS genome sequence. Clone complexes demonstrated that bovine and fish isolates were separate populations. These findings lead us to conclude that fish S. agalactiae is not a zoonotic agent for bovine. MLST could help clarify the emergence of pathogenic clones and to decide whether the host acts as a reservoir for another pathogenic lineage.

Copyrights © 2013






Journal Info

Abbrev

hayati

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry Earth & Planetary Sciences

Description

HAYATI Journal of Biosciences (HAYATI J Biosci) publishes articles and short communication in tropical bioscience fields such as development, biotechnology, biodiversity and environmental issues. HAYATI J Biosci covers wide range of all life forms topics including virus, microbes, fungi, plants, ...