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Examination of Taxonomic Uncertainties Surrounding Brucella abortus bv. 7 by Phenotypic and Molecular Approaches
Authors:Bruno Garin-Bastuji  Virginie Mick  Gilles Le Carrou  Sebastien Allix  Lorraine L. Perrett  Claire E. Dawson  Pauline Groussaud  Emma J. Stubberfield  Mark Koylass  Adrian M. Whatmore
Affiliation:aParis-Est University-ANSES, Animal Health Laboratory, Bacterial Zoonoses Unit, National Reference Centre for Human Brucellosis, National & EU/OIE/FAO Reference Laboratory for Animal Brucellosis, Maisons-Alfort, France;bFAO/WHO Collaborating Centre for Brucellosis/OIE Brucellosis Reference Centre, Animal Health and Veterinary Laboratories Agency, Addlestone, Surrey, United Kingdom
Abstract:Brucella taxonomy is perpetually being reshuffled, at both the species and intraspecies levels. Biovar 7 of Brucella abortus was suspended from the Approved Lists of Bacterial NamesBrucella classification in 1988, because of unpublished evidence that the reference strain 63/75 was a mixture of B. abortus biovars 3 and 5. To formally clarify the situation, all isolates previously identified as B. abortus bv. 7 in the AHVLA and ANSES strain collections were characterized by classical microbiological and multiple molecular approaches. Among the 14 investigated strains, including strain 63/75, only four strains, isolated in Kenya, Turkey, and Mongolia, were pure and showed a phenotypic profile in agreement with the former biovar 7, particularly agglutination with both anti-A/anti-M monospecific sera. These results were strengthened by molecular strategies. Indeed, genus- and species-specific methods allowed confirmation that the four pure strains belonged to the B. abortus species. The combination of most approaches excluded their affiliation with the recognized biovars (biovars 1 to 6 and 9), while some suggested that they were close to biovar 3.These assays were complemented by phylogenetic and/or epidemiological methods, such as multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) and variable-number tandem repeat (VNTR) analysis. The results of this polyphasic investigation allow us to propose the reintroduction of biovar 7 into the Brucella classification, with at least three representative strains. Interestingly, the Kenyan strain, sharing the same biovar 7 phenotype, was genetically divergent from other three isolates. These discrepancies illustrate the complexity of Brucella taxonomy. This study suggests that worldwide collections could include strains misidentified as B. abortus bv. 7, and it highlights the need to verify their real taxonomic position.
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