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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 2003, p. 4468-4470, Vol. 41, No. 9
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.9.4468-4470.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Animal Hygiene, School of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences, Kitasato University, Towada, Aomori 034-8628, Japan,1 Department of Large Animal Medicine and Surgery, College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843,2 Ruakura Animal Health Laboratory, Hamilton, New Zealand,3 Infectious Diseases of the Domestic Animals, FMVZ-UNESP/Botucatu, SP,4 Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, Puc-Curitiba, PR, Brazil,5 Department of Pathobiology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1, Canada6
Received 3 March 2003/ Returned for modification 13 April 2003/ Accepted 21 June 2003
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The discovery of virulence-associated antigens and virulence plasmids has allowed the virulence of R. equi strains to be classified (24, 26). At least three levels of virulence have been identified for R. equi: virulent, intermediately virulent, and avirulent (16). Virulent R. equi is characterized by the presence of 15- to 17-kDa virulence-associated antigens (VapA) and virulence plasmid DNA of 80 to 90 kb (21, 24, 25), and these strains are found in the pulmonary or intestinal lesions of foals and in the pulmonary lesions of AIDS patients (murine 50% lethal dose [LD50] = 106 bacteria) (23). R. equi strains of intermediate virulence are identified by a 20-kDa virulence-associated antigen (VapB) and virulence plasmid DNA of 79 to 100 kb and are found in the submaxillary lymph nodes of pigs (murine LD50 = 107 bacteria) and the pulmonary lesions of AIDS patients (22). In contrast, avirulent R. equi shows evidence of neither virulence-associated antigens nor plasmid DNA (murine LD50 = >108 bacteria) and is widespread in soil (16). It is noteworthy that the majority of R. equi isolates from AIDS patients are virulent or intermediately virulent, whereas those from patients with immunosuppression derived from other causes are avirulent (22, 23).
Exposure to manure and soils contaminated with the manure of domestic animals such as horses, cattle, and pigs may be one of the possible routes of infection in humans (15, 16). Cats and dogs infected with R. equi have not been considered to be a source of infection for humans, who usually acquire the infection from environmental exposure. Nevertheless, infected cats and dogs with discharges may pose some theoretical risk to immunocompromised owners (9, 12, 27). There have been few studies that include the plasmid profiles or report the presence of VapA in isolates from companion animals (19, 26). Therefore, the pathogenicity of R. equi isolates from cats and dogs remains unclear. The purposes of this study were to investigate the presence of vap genes in 18 R. equi isolates from cats and dogs and to examine the plasmid profiles of these isolates.
The clinical isolates of R. equi used in the present study are listed in Table 1. Five cat isolates and seven dog isolates were obtained from the College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University; two cat isolates and two dog isolates were from Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph; and one cat isolate each was from New Zealand and Brazil. Although the respiratory tract is not a principal site of infection in these animals, nasal swabs were collected from three dogs. Extrapulmonary infection was more common in both cats and dogs, including wound infections, subcutaneous abscesses, vaginitis, hepatitis, osteomyelitis, myositis, and joint infections. Swabs were also collected from the eyes and ears of these animals. Unfortunately, details of the clinical manifestations were not available in most cases.
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Of the nine clinical isolates from cats, five isolates from Brazil, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States were positive for vapA and virulence plasmid DNA. Of the nine clinical isolates from dogs, one isolate from the United States was positive for vapA and virulence plasmid DNA. The remaining four cat and eight dog isolates were negative for both virulence-associated antigens and plasmids. The six isolates expressing VapA and a positive control, ATCC 33701, produced positive results in the PCR, showing a 547-bp amplification product. Plasmid DNA preparations from the six isolates were analyzed by restriction enzyme digestion with the four endonucleases, and four of the six isolates contained an 85-kb type I plasmid and the remaining two isolates contained an 87-kb type I plasmid.
There have been sporadic reports in the literature of Rhodococcus infections in cats associated with mediastinal and mesenteric lymphadenitis (11) and cellulitis and abscesses, mainly of the extremities (6, 7, 10, 13) and of the neck (14). More recently, reports of R. equi infections in dogs have appeared (5). Although the number of cases is increasing, the virulence of the feline and canine isolates has not previously been characterized. In this study, we examined 18 cat and dog isolates from the Americas and New Zealand and found that five of the nine cat isolates and one of the nine dog isolates were R. equi VapA positive and that the remaining isolates were avirulent. Fisher's exact test indicated that there was no statistically significant difference between the nine isolates from cats and the nine isolates from dogs. However, when the data (shown in Table 1) from previous studies (5, 19, 26) were added into the statistical analysis, there was a significant difference between the 11 cat isolates and the 13 dog isolates. These results may reflect differences between the features of cat and dog infections, such as the source or route of infection or the predisposing factors of the hosts.
Virulent, but not avirulent, R. equi can produce pneumonic disease in foals experimentally (16), and clinical isolates from naturally infected foals have all been virulent R. equi strains expressing VapA (16, 24). On the other hand, the majority of pig isolates are intermediately virulent R. equi strains expressing VapB (18). VapA-positive R. equi is widespread in the environments of horse-breeding farms (16), and VapB-positive R. equi is largely restricted to the environments of pig farms (18). Previous studies thus suggest that VapA-positive R. equi isolates from cats and dog should be derived from horses or their environments (16). The plasmid profiles of VapA-positive isolates from cats and dogs also indicate that these isolates may be closely associated with those from horses, because either 85-kb type I or 87-kb type I plasmids have been found in clinical isolates from foals in North and South America (17, 25). However, little is known about the source and mode of R. equi infections in cats and dogs. Exposure to soil contaminated with livestock manure is likely to be the major route of infection for these companion animals. The most probable mode of infection could involve the establishment of R. equi in subcutaneous tissues after a penetrating wound is contaminated from environmental sources, with subsequent hematogenous dissemination to the spleen and local spread to the peritoneal cavity (14). In the present study, a Brazilian cat from which isolate 8 was recovered had had contact with horses and cows, but we have no information about the exposure of the other animals from which isolates were taken.
In the nine dog isolates, one isolate was from a puppy and three were from old dogs, suggesting that immaturity and impairment of the immune system may be predisposing factors. Cantor et al. (5) also discussed the possibility of intrinsic defects of the immune system in their 3-month-old animal.
In humans, R. equi infections have primarily been reported in association with human immunodeficiency virus infections and other immunosuppressive diseases or therapy (27). The majority of cat isolates in this and previous studies were virulent R. equi strains (26). It is very interesting that the prevalence of virulent R. equi in cats and dogs is very similar to that in patients with and without AIDS, respectively (22, 23). Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV)-infected cats are found worldwide (2). In the United States, approximately 1.5 to 3% of healthy cats are infected with FIV (2). Infection rates rise significantly in cats that are sick; up to 15% of cats with clinical signs of other diseases are also infected with FIV (2). In the present study, there was no information on the FIV status of the nine cats analyzed, but the high seroprevalence of FIV in clinically ill cats suggests that some of the feline R. equi infections studied were probably associated with FIV infections (2).
R. equi infections in companion animals have been thought to be very rare, but they may be increasing in cats and dogs. It is possible, however, that in the past, laboratories have misidentified colonies of R. equi as contaminants in routine bacteriological examination of specimens from cats and dogs or that such isolates were not reported in the literature, even when correctly identified. Further epidemiological surveillance may clarify the incidence of R. equi infection and the factors predisposing cats and dogs to this infection.
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