Classification of avian haemolytic Actinobacillus-like organisms (Bisgaard taxon 26) associated with anseriforme birds as Actinobacillus anseriformium sp. nov.

Magne Bisgaard, Henrik Christensen

    7 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Avian haemolytic Actinobacillus-like organisms have tentatively been named Bisgaard taxon 26. Phenotypic information has been published on 65 strains of this taxon. In the current study, 31 isolates were selected for genotypic characterization. Thirty strains had the same rpoB sequence and only one strain diverged in 1 nt. The highest rpoB similarity to members of other taxa was 89.7% to the type strain of Actinobacillus equuli subsp. haemolyticus and the similarity to the type strain of the type species, Actinobacillus lignieresii, was 88.2%. The lowest 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity between strains of the group was determined in previous investigations to be 99.6% and the highest similarities of 96.4 and 96.2% outside the group were obtained to the reference strain of Actinobacillus genomospecies 2 and to the type strain of A. equuli subsp. equuli, respectively; 95.8-95.3% similarity was obtained with the type strain of A. lignieresii. recN gene sequence similarities within the group were from 99.5% (strains F66T and F64) to 99.8% (strains F66T and F67) corresponding to genome similarities of 93.9-94.6%, which are near the upper limit for species compared with other members of the Pasteurellaceae. The highest recN similarity outside the group (83.4%) was observed to the type strain of Actinobacillus capsulatus, whereas the similarity to the type strain of A. lignieresii was 80.9%, corresponding to genome similarities of 57.7 and 52.0%, respectively. All isolates meet the phenotypic characters outlined for Actinobacillus (urease-, phosphatase- and porphyrin-positive, indole-negative, acid production from fructose, sucrose, maltose and dextrin). β-Haemolysis of bovine blood is observed and isolates may demonstrate in vitro satellitic growth, referred to as V-factor or NAD requirement. Isolates have been obtained from the upper respiratory tract of web-footed birds in which they may cause sinusitis, conjunctivitis and septicaemia. Based on the characterization reported, it is proposed that the isolates belong to a novel species, Actinobacillus anseriformium sp. nov., which includes taxon 26 and a V-factor-dependent strain. The major fatty acids of the type strain are C16:1 ω7c, C14:0,C16:0 and C14:0 3-OH and/or iso-C16:1 I, corresponding to the profile observed for the type strain of A. lignieresii. Five to 12 characters separate A. anseriformium from other taxa of Actinobacillus, with Actinobacillus ureae being most closely related; A. anseriformium can be differentiated from A. ureae based on haemolysis, β-glucosidase, and production of acid from -D-sorbitol, trehalose and glycosides. The type strain of A. anseriformium is F66T (=CCUG 60324T=CCM 7846T), which was isolated from conjunctivitis in a White Pekin duck.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology
    Volume62
    Issue number2
    Pages (from-to)352-358
    Number of pages7
    ISSN1466-5026
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb 2012

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