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O-serotyping of Yersinia Ruckeri with Special Emphasis on European Isolates

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Journal Vet Microbiol
Date 1990 May 1
PMID 1694607
Citations 11
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Abstract

Yersinia ruckeri is the aetiological agent of enteric redmouth disease (ERM), an acute to chronic bacteraemic infection of salmonid fish. The O-serotypes of 127 isolates of Y. ruckeri obtained from Europe (96 isolates), North America (23 isolates), Australia (six isolates) and South Africa (two isolates), as well as four reference strains, were determined by slide agglutination test and microplate agglutination assay. A serotyping scheme is proposed based on heat-stable O-antigens; the serotypes were designated O1, O2, O5, O6 and O7. The proposed scheme is compared to serotyping schemes described by other authors. All five O-serotypes were present in both Europe and North America, whereas only serotype O1 isolates were identified in Australia and South Africa. These findings suggest that European and North American populations of Y. ruckeri are interrelated, thus supporting previous evidence which suggests that the organism was introduced into Europe from North America by the importation of asymptomatic infected carrier fish. Conversely, the results suggest that Australia and South Africa are more isolated from the dissemination of Y. ruckeri. Serotypes O5, O6 and O7 have not previously been recognized in Europe and these findings will have important implications on the diagnosis of ERM and on the vaccination of fish against this disease. It is suggested that the Australian isolate previously described as serotype III is a rough-type mutant and that other isolates described in the literature as serotype III have been incorrectly serotyped and are, in fact, serotype O1. To avoid further confusion it is suggested that the scheme described here be adopted for serological studies of Y. ruckeri.

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