944 resultados para Salmonella enteritidis
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A Salmonella permanece um importante problema na avicultura mundial e considerando os patógenos transmitidos por alimentos, a Salmonella aparece como um dos agentes principais em surtos de toxinfecções alimentares. Existem vários relatos de isolamento de Salmonella em frangos vivos e surtos alimentares, porém em carcaças de frangos e cortes a disponibilidade de dados é menor, assim como estudos de determinação do número de Salmonella presentes nas amostras, também são poucos. No presente estudo, foram analisadas 180 carcaças de frangos resfriadas, adquiridas em varejos, para determinação da ocorrência de contaminação por Salmonella pelo método de microbiologia convencional, ensaio imunoenzimático (ELISA) e determinação do número de células da bactéria pelo método do número mais provável (NMP) nos ágares para isolamento verde brilhante com novobiocina (BGN) e xilose-lisina tergitol 4 (XLT4). Neste mesmo estudo, foi determinado o perfil de resistência a antimicrobianos de 13 amostras de Salmonella isoladas das carcaças de frangos, e analisados 101 suabes de arrasto de camas aviárias, pelo método microbiológico convencional, para a presença do agente. Os resultados mostraram 15,8% de ocorrência de Salmonella nos suabes de arrasto e 12,2% de ocorrência nas carcaças de frangos resfriadas, pelo método de microbiologia convencional. O teste de ELISA detectou 11,3% de positividade para Salmonella nas carcaças de frangos resfriadas. A média de NMP de Salmonella por mL, na leitura pelo ágar XLT4 foi de 2,674 células e BGN foi de 1,282 células. As cepas de Salmonella apresentaram resistência aos antimicrobianos lincomicina, penicilina e estreptomicina (100%), josamicina e enrofloxacina (69,23%), amoxicilina (30,76%), clortetraciclina (23,07%), estreptomicina e estreptomicina + penicilina (15,83%) e 7,69% de resistência a doxiciclina e polimixina B. Os sorovares de Salmonella isolados no estudo foram Enteritidis, Agona, Risssen, Heidelberg e Livingstone, nas carcaças de frangos, e, Enteritidis, Agona, Ohio, Rissen, Tennessee, entérica O: 3,10 e entérica O: 6,71 nos suabes de arrasto. A análise dos resultados apresentou contaminação por Salmonella nas camas aviárias e presença de cepas de Salmonella, isoladas das carcaças, multiresistentes a antimicrobianos. Também demonstrou existir um número variável de células de Salmonella contaminando as carcaças de frango resfriadas que estão à venda ao consumidor.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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This study evaluated two enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) in the detection of chicken serologic response against Salmonella enterica sorotype Typhimurium. The assays have used as detecting antigen the soluble bacterial proteins of a non-flagellated strain of Salmonella Typhimurium (AgTM), and antibody conjugated to peroxidase or alkaline phosphatase. According to the results, optimal dilutions of antigen (concentration 5.49 mg/mL) and serum samples in both assays were 1:20,000 and 1:1,000, respectively. In such conditions, the ELISA/AgTM was able to detect serological response to Salmonella Typhimurium. Cross-reactions to Salmonella serotypes Gallinarum and Pullorum were seen, but not with other serotypes such as Enteritidis.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Experiments were carried out on the antibacterial effects of a commercial formic acid-propionic acid mixture (Bio-add(TM)) against different Salmonella serptj pes. The preparation exerted a strong antibacterial effect on S. typhimurium strain F98 in artificially contaminated feed. After 28 days storage, the bactericidal effect was still considerable. When chickens were reared on feed that had been treated with Bio-add(TM) and artificially contaminated with different serotypes, S. enteritidis, S. typhimurium and S. agona were not isolated from the caecal contents, but S. infantis was. No organisms of this strain were isolated when a lower feed-contamination rate of bacteria was used.
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The serological response to Salmonella pullorum and S. gallinarum infection in chickens was studied with an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In broiler chickens, a more virulent strain of S. pullorum produced a significantly lower serum IgG titer than did a less virulent strain. In laying hens, the serum and egg-yolk IgG titers were very similar. In chickens infected with S. gallinarum, high IgG titers persisted for 30 weeks. In chickens reinfected with this strain, each reinfection was followed by transitory increases in IgG lasting no longer than 2 weeks. Serum samples from Brazil taken from a laying flock with evidence of fowl typhoid showed much higher antibody levels than did those from three uninfected flocks. Using lipopolysaccharide as the detecting antigen, infections caused by these salmonellae could be differentiated from those caused by other groups. Incorporation of the appropriate flagella antigen in the ELISA allowed differentiation between infections caused by S. pullorum and S. enteritidis.
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Hundred and fifty frozen broiler carcasses of four commercial brands, purchased at retail stores for Salmonella research, were examined: 43 of the carcasses referred to each of the brands A, B, D and 21 of brand C. Thirty-two percent of the samples were found positive; 11 serotypes were identified as S. Agona, S. Anatum, S. Enteritidis, S. Hadar, S. Havana, S. Mbandaka, S. Montevideo, S. Ouakam, S. Poona, S. Schwarzengrund and S.14, 5, 12:-. Antibiogram testing of the isolated strains showed 100% resistance to ampicilin, 75.0% to cefhalotin, 52.1% to cephoxitin, 22.9% to tobramicin, 6.2% to polimixin B and to tetracyclines, 4.2% to gentamicin, and 2.1% to netilmicin, to aztreonam and to amicacin. All strains showed total sensibility to chloramphenicol and to sulfazotrim.
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Pós-graduação em Medicina Veterinária - FCAV
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Pós-graduação em Medicina Veterinária - FCAV
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Salmonella enterica subspecies I serovars are common bacterial pathogens causing diseases ranging from enterocolitis to systemic infections. Some serovars are adapted to specific hosts, whereas others have a broad host range. The molecular mechanisms defining the virulence characteristics and the host range of a given S. enterica serovar are unknown. Streptomycin pretreated mice provide a surrogate host model for studying molecular aspects of the intestinal inflammation (colitis) caused by serovar Typhimurium (S. Hapfelmeier and W. D. Hardt, Trends Microbiol. 13:497-503, 2005). Here, we studied whether this animal model is also useful for studying other S. enterica subspecies I serovars. All three tested strains of the broad-host-range serovar Enteritidis (125109, 5496/98, and 832/99) caused pronounced colitis and systemic infection in streptomycin pretreated mice. Different levels of virulence were observed among three tested strains of the host-adapted serovar Dublin (SARB13, SD2229, and SD3246). Several strains of host restricted serovars were also studied. Two serovar Pullorum strains (X3543 and 449/87) caused intermediate levels of colitis. No intestinal inflammation was observed upon infection with three different serovar Paratyphi A strains (SARB42, 2804/96, and 5314/98) and one serovar Gallinarum strain (X3796). A second serovar Gallinarum strain (287/91) was highly virulent and caused severe colitis. This strain awaits future analysis. In conclusion, the streptomycin pretreated mouse model can provide an additional tool to study virulence factors (i.e., those involved in enteropathogenesis) of various S. enterica subspecies I serovars. Five of these strains (125109, 2229, 287/91, 449/87, and SARB42) are subject of Salmonella genome sequencing projects. The streptomycin pretreated mouse model may be useful for testing hypotheses derived from this genomic data.
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Based on bacterial genomic data, we developed a one-step multiplex PCR assay to identify Salmonella and simultaneously differentiate the two invasive avian-adapted S. enterica serovar Gallinarum biotypes Gallinarum and Pullorum, and the most frequent, specific, and asymptomatic colonizers of chickens, serovars Enteritidis, Heidelberg, and Kentucky.