Intracellular Campylobacter-like organism from ferrets and hamsters with proliferative bowel disease is a Desulfovibrio sp.

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Proliferative bowel disease is an intestinal disorder of a variety of domestic animals associated with the presence of an intracellular Campylobacter-like organism (ICLO). We have identified the ICLO obtained from a ferret with proliferative colitis by 16S rRNA sequence analysis. In this ferret, proliferative bowel tissue containing the ICLO had translocated to the mesenteric lymph nodes, omentum, and liver. The 16S rRNA genes of the ICLO were amplified from an infected fragment of extraintestinal tissue by using universal prokaryotic primers. Approximately 1,480 bases of the amplified 16S rRNA gene were sequenced by cycle sequencing. Comparison of the sequence of the ICLO with those of over 400 bacteria in our data base indicated that the sequence of the ICLO was most closely related to that of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (87.5% similarity). Phylogenetic analysis with 12 Desulfovibrio species and 20 species from related genera placed the ICLO in a subcluster within the genus Desulfovibrio with D. desulfuricans and 5 other Desulfovibrio species. We will refer to this organism as the intracellular Desulfovibrio organism (IDO). Specific primers were produced for PCR amplification of a 550-base fragment of the 16S rRNA gene of the IDO in proliferative intestinal tissue samples. This unique 550-base segment was amplified from samples of frozen intestinal tissue from nine ferrets and three hamsters with ICLO-associated disease but not in four intestinal tissue samples from animals without the ICLO-associated disease. The 550-base amplified products from the bowel tissues of one hamster and one ferret were fully sequenced. The ferret IDO partial sequence was identical to the previously determined 16S rRNA sequence over its length, and the hamster IDO sequence differed by a single base. The same intracellular organism has been identified in proliferative intestinal tissues of swine and that the organism has been successfully maintained in tissue culture. The availability of specific primers for PCR-based detection of this intracellular Desulfovibrio organism will aid in the determination of its role in the pathogenesis of proliferative bowel disease in a variety of infected hosts.

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