4 results on '"Bertolotti, Luigi"'
Search Results
2. Meconium microbiota in naturally delivered canine puppies.
- Author
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Bertero, Alessia, Banchi, Penelope, Del Carro, Angela, Corrò, Michela, Colitti, Barbara, Van Soom, Ann, Bertolotti, Luigi, and Rota, Ada
- Subjects
COLONIZATION (Ecology) ,GUT microbiome ,ENTEROCOCCUS faecalis ,ENVIRONMENTAL sampling ,PUPPIES ,MECONIUM - Abstract
Background: Microbial colonization during early life has a pivotal impact on the host health, shaping immune and metabolic functions, but little is known about timing and features of this process in dogs. The objectives of this study were to characterize the first step of intestinal microbiota development in naturally delivered canine puppies and to investigate its relationship with the maternal bacterial flora, using traditional culture and molecular analyses. Sixty puppies of two breeds, Appenzeller Cattle Dog (n = 3 dams) and Lagotto Romagnolo (n = 6), housed in the same breeding kennel, were included in the study. Swabs were collected in duplicate (for culture and for molecular analysis) from the dams' vagina and rectum at the end of parturition, from puppies' rectum, before maternal care, and from the environment (floor of the nursery and parturition box). Results: 93.3% meconium samples showed bacterial growth, limited to a few colonies in 57.0% of cases. High growth was detected for Enterococcus faecalis, which was the most frequently isolated bacterium. The genus Enterococcus was one of the most represented in the dams' rectum and vagina (88.9% and 55.6%, respectively). The genera Staphylococcus, Enterococcus, Escherichia and Proteus were also often isolated in meconium but were usually present in maternal samples as well, together with ubiquitous bacteria (Acinetobacter, Psychrobacter). In the environmental samples, just a few bacterial species were found, all with low microbial load. Additionally, bacteria of the phyla Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Actinobacteria were identified in meconium through molecular analysis, confirming the culture results and the early colonization of the newborn gut. Maternal, meconium and environmental samples had similar alpha diversity, while beta-diversity showed differences among families (i.e. a dam and her litter), and association indexes revealed a significant correlation between family members and between sample origin, suggesting a strong contribution of the maternal flora to the initial seeding of the canine neonatal gut and a strong individual dam imprint. Conclusion: This study showed that the meconium of vaginally delivered puppies has its own microbiota immediately after birth, and that it is shaped by the dam, which gives a specific imprint to her litter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Swinepox virus: an unusual outbreak in free-range pig farms in Sicily (Italy).
- Author
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Di Marco Lo Presti, Vincenzo, Ippolito, Dorotea, Cardeti, Giusy, Cersini, Antonella, Bertolotti, Luigi, Amato, Benedetta, Colitti, Barbara, Giudice, Chiara, Pruiti Ciarello, Flavia, Vicari, Domenico, Scicluna, Maria Teresa, Capucchio, Maria Teresa, Calogero, Rosita, and Fiasconaro, Michele
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL exhibitions ,AUTOPSY ,CONSCIOUSNESS raising ,ECTOPARASITIC infestations ,SWINE ,SWINE farms - Abstract
Background: Two outbreaks of swinepox were investigated in free-range domestic pig farms located in the northeastern side of Sicily, Italy. The disease is generally self-limiting with a low mortality rate, but morbidity can reach high rates in case of poor sanitary conditions, improper husbandry practices and ectoparasitic infestation. The presented cases are the first ever reported on the island and part of the few cases reported in domestic pigs. Case presentation: Carcasses condemned at the slaughterhouse and deceased pigs from Farm A and Farm B respectively, were referred for post-mortem examination and further investigations, with a strong suspect of SwinePox virus (SWPV) infection. Twelve deceased pigs were examined in total, showing poor body condition and pustular lesions scattered all over the cutaneous surfaces. Moreover, pigs from Farm B showed ocular lesions classified from Grade I to IV (from mild conjunctivitis to severe keratoconjunctivitis with corneal oedema, opacity, and ulcers). Final diagnosis was pursued by the microscopic assessment of skin lesions in both farms, which revealed the typical SWPV-lesion appearance, such as severe and disseminated ulcerative dermatitis and suspected inclusion bodies multifocally observed in the epidermis. Moreover, negative staining Electron Microscopy (nsEM) was performed on skin lesions and ocular swabs from Farm B, revealing in two samples the presence of brick-shaped viral particles, 220 nm long and 160 nm wide, with irregularly arranged surface tubules, identified as SWPV. The gene encoding the 482-bp fragment of the virus late transcription factor–3 was detected by PCR and sequencing revealed 99.79% identity and 100% query-cover with a strain previously isolated in Germany. Field clinical assessment was then performed in Farm B, revealing high overcrowding, poor sanitary conditions and improper husbandry practices, which are relevant risk factors for SWPV transmission. Conclusions: The present is the first case report of SWPV in free-range pigs raised in Sicily, an island of the Southern coast of Italy, and wants to raise awareness on a neglected disease, and cause of animal health and welfare issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Molecular Surveillance for Bocaparvoviruses and Bufaviruses in the European Hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus)
- Author
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Sarchese, Vittorio, primary, Palombieri, Andrea, additional, Prandi, Ilaria, additional, Robetto, Serena, additional, Bertolotti, Luigi, additional, Capucchio, Maria Teresa, additional, Orusa, Riccardo, additional, Mauthe von Degerfeld, Mitzy, additional, Quaranta, Giuseppe, additional, Vacchetta, Massimo, additional, Martella, Vito, additional, Di Martino, Barbara, additional, and Di Profio, Federica, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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