Molecular and serological dynamics of Chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production

Background Chlamydia pecorum is a globally significant livestock pathogen causing pathology and production losses. The on-farm infection and serological dynamics and the relevance of existing diagnostic tools for diagnosing C. pecorum in livestock remains poorly characterized. In this study, we char...

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Main Authors: Sankhya Bommana, Evelyn Walker, Marion Desclozeaux, Martina Jelocnik, Peter Timms, Adam Polkinghorne, Scott Carver
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-01-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/4296.pdf
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author Sankhya Bommana
Evelyn Walker
Marion Desclozeaux
Martina Jelocnik
Peter Timms
Adam Polkinghorne
Scott Carver
author_facet Sankhya Bommana
Evelyn Walker
Marion Desclozeaux
Martina Jelocnik
Peter Timms
Adam Polkinghorne
Scott Carver
author_sort Sankhya Bommana
collection DOAJ
description Background Chlamydia pecorum is a globally significant livestock pathogen causing pathology and production losses. The on-farm infection and serological dynamics and the relevance of existing diagnostic tools for diagnosing C. pecorum in livestock remains poorly characterized. In this study, we characterized the antigen and antibody dynamics of this pathogen in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production, utilizing the infection focused C. pecorum-specific 16S rRNA qPCR assay and serology based chlamydial Complement fixation Test (CFT). Methods The study consisted of 76 Border Leicester mixed sex lambs (39 females and 37 males) that were sampled bimonthly from 2–10 months of age in a commercial farm operating in Central NSW, Australia. Blood/plasma was analysed for CFT antibodies, and swabs from conjunctival, rectal and vaginal sites were analysed for C. pecorum shedding using qPCR. We assessed the temporal and overall dynamics of C. pecorum in lambs, including detailed description and comparison of qPCR and CFT, the timing of first detection by either diagnostic method, the lag between infection and antibody response; and the distribution of qPCR load and CFT antibody titre over time. Results Over the study period, C. pecorum was highly prevalent (71.0% by qPCR, 92.1% by CFT, 96.0% by both), with 21.1% (16/76) lambs shedding ≥1, 000 qPCR copies/µl (denoted as high shedders). C. pecorum shedding (as evidence of infection) were first observed at two months of age (14.4%) with a significant peak of infection occurring at six months of age (34.2%), whereas seroconversions peaked at eight months of age (81.5%). 52.6% of C. pecorum qPCR and CFT positive lambs became qPCR negative by 10 months of age, indicating clearance of chlamydial infection. Although CFT is utilised for on-farm detection of active infection, we confirm that it lagged behind qPCR detection (average lag 1.7 ± 2.1 months) and that the proportion of qPCR positives simultaneously identified by CFT was low with 2/11 (18.1%), 0/13, 17/25 (68.0%), 5/7 (71.4%) and 1/10 (10.0%) concurrent seroconversions occurring at two, four, six, eight and 10 months of age, respectively. Discussion This work reveals rapid rates of C. pecorum infection and widespread exposure during lamb production. The comparison of molecular and serological diagnostic agreement longitudinally, supports the use of qPCR as an important ancillary tool for the detection of active infections in conjunction with chlamydial CFT for routine veterinary diagnostics. Development of rapid Point-of-Care (POC) tools for diagnosing active infection would be valuable for producers and veterinarians.
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spelling doaj.art-7ec807bafba24ceba0339dfc567bec922023-12-03T10:31:24ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-01-016e429610.7717/peerj.4296Molecular and serological dynamics of Chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb productionSankhya Bommana0Evelyn Walker1Marion Desclozeaux2Martina Jelocnik3Peter Timms4Adam Polkinghorne5Scott Carver6Centre for Animal Health Innovation, University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, AustraliaCentral West Local Land Services, Dubbo, AustraliaCentre for Animal Health Innovation, University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, AustraliaCentre for Animal Health Innovation, University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, AustraliaCentre for Animal Health Innovation, University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, AustraliaCentre for Animal Health Innovation, University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, AustraliaSchool of Biological Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, AustraliaBackground Chlamydia pecorum is a globally significant livestock pathogen causing pathology and production losses. The on-farm infection and serological dynamics and the relevance of existing diagnostic tools for diagnosing C. pecorum in livestock remains poorly characterized. In this study, we characterized the antigen and antibody dynamics of this pathogen in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production, utilizing the infection focused C. pecorum-specific 16S rRNA qPCR assay and serology based chlamydial Complement fixation Test (CFT). Methods The study consisted of 76 Border Leicester mixed sex lambs (39 females and 37 males) that were sampled bimonthly from 2–10 months of age in a commercial farm operating in Central NSW, Australia. Blood/plasma was analysed for CFT antibodies, and swabs from conjunctival, rectal and vaginal sites were analysed for C. pecorum shedding using qPCR. We assessed the temporal and overall dynamics of C. pecorum in lambs, including detailed description and comparison of qPCR and CFT, the timing of first detection by either diagnostic method, the lag between infection and antibody response; and the distribution of qPCR load and CFT antibody titre over time. Results Over the study period, C. pecorum was highly prevalent (71.0% by qPCR, 92.1% by CFT, 96.0% by both), with 21.1% (16/76) lambs shedding ≥1, 000 qPCR copies/µl (denoted as high shedders). C. pecorum shedding (as evidence of infection) were first observed at two months of age (14.4%) with a significant peak of infection occurring at six months of age (34.2%), whereas seroconversions peaked at eight months of age (81.5%). 52.6% of C. pecorum qPCR and CFT positive lambs became qPCR negative by 10 months of age, indicating clearance of chlamydial infection. Although CFT is utilised for on-farm detection of active infection, we confirm that it lagged behind qPCR detection (average lag 1.7 ± 2.1 months) and that the proportion of qPCR positives simultaneously identified by CFT was low with 2/11 (18.1%), 0/13, 17/25 (68.0%), 5/7 (71.4%) and 1/10 (10.0%) concurrent seroconversions occurring at two, four, six, eight and 10 months of age, respectively. Discussion This work reveals rapid rates of C. pecorum infection and widespread exposure during lamb production. The comparison of molecular and serological diagnostic agreement longitudinally, supports the use of qPCR as an important ancillary tool for the detection of active infections in conjunction with chlamydial CFT for routine veterinary diagnostics. Development of rapid Point-of-Care (POC) tools for diagnosing active infection would be valuable for producers and veterinarians.https://peerj.com/articles/4296.pdfChlamydia pecorumDiagnosisInfectionSerologyLamb
spellingShingle Sankhya Bommana
Evelyn Walker
Marion Desclozeaux
Martina Jelocnik
Peter Timms
Adam Polkinghorne
Scott Carver
Molecular and serological dynamics of Chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production
PeerJ
Chlamydia pecorum
Diagnosis
Infection
Serology
Lamb
title Molecular and serological dynamics of Chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production
title_full Molecular and serological dynamics of Chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production
title_fullStr Molecular and serological dynamics of Chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production
title_full_unstemmed Molecular and serological dynamics of Chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production
title_short Molecular and serological dynamics of Chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production
title_sort molecular and serological dynamics of chlamydia pecorum infection in a longitudinal study of prime lamb production
topic Chlamydia pecorum
Diagnosis
Infection
Serology
Lamb
url https://peerj.com/articles/4296.pdf
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