Salmonella enterica serovar Brandenburg abortions in dairy cattle.
Christopher L SiepkerKent J SchwartzTyler J FeldhackerDrew R MagstadtOrhan SahinMarcelo Nunes De AlmeidaGanwu LiKristin P HaymanPatrick J GordenPublished in: Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc (2022)
Two separate late-term abortion outbreaks in Jersey heifers in July 2020 and December 2020 were investigated by the Iowa State University Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory. We evaluated 3 whole fetuses and 11 sets of fresh and formalin-fixed fetal tissues during the course of the outbreaks. The late-term abortions were first identified at a heifer development site and subsequently observed at the dairy farm. Aborted fetuses had moderate-to-marked postmortem autolysis with no gross lesions identified. Observed clinical signs in cows at the dairy farm ranged from intermittent loose stools to acute post-abortion pyrexia and reduced feed intake. Routine histopathology and reproductive bacterial culture revealed acute, suppurative placentitis with moderate-to-heavy growth of Salmonella spp. group B from stomach contents, liver, placenta, and heifer fecal contents. Serotyping identified Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Brandenburg in all 14 fresh tissue cases, as well as individual and pooled heifer feces. Whole-genome sequencing analysis revealed that all isolates belonged to ST type 873 and possessed typhoid toxin genes, several fimbrial gene clusters, type III secretion system genes, and several pathogenicity islands. Abortions caused by Salmonella Brandenburg have not been reported previously in dairy cattle in the United States, to our knowledge.
Keyphrases
- listeria monocytogenes
- gestational age
- escherichia coli
- liver failure
- genome wide
- type iii
- genome wide identification
- high intensity
- respiratory failure
- preterm infants
- single cell
- aortic dissection
- drug induced
- genome wide analysis
- healthcare
- preterm birth
- clinical practice
- randomized controlled trial
- biofilm formation
- transcription factor
- infectious diseases
- weight gain
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- mass spectrometry
- physical activity
- mechanical ventilation
- antimicrobial resistance
- candida albicans