1. Dynamics of Campylobacter colonization of a natural host, Sturnus vulgaris (European starling)
- Author
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J. C. Howe, Frances M. Colles, Andrew G. Gosler, Noel D. McCarthy, C. L. Devereux, and Martin C. J. Maiden
- Subjects
DNA, Bacterial ,Genotype ,Campylobacteriosis ,Zoology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Campylobacter jejuni ,Feces ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Animals ,Cluster Analysis ,Colonization ,Typing ,Research Articles ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biology ,Campylobacter ,Starling ,Genetic Variation ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,DNA Fingerprinting ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,Sturnus ,Starlings ,Multilocus sequence typing ,Seasons - Abstract
Wild European Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) shed Campylobacter at high rates, suggesting that they may be a source of human and farm animal infection. A survey of Campylobacter shedding of 957 wild starlings was undertaken by culture of faecal specimens and genetic analysis of the campylobacters isolated: shedding rates were 30.6% for Campylobacter jejuni, 0.6% for C. coli and 6.3% for C. lari. Genotyping by multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and antigen sequence typing established that these bacteria were distinct from poultry or human disease isolates with the ST-177 and ST-682 clonal complexes possibly representing starling-adapted genotypes. There was seasonal variation in both shedding rate and genotypic diversity, both exhibiting a maximum during the late spring/early summer. Host age also affected Campylobacter shedding, which was higher in younger birds, and turnover was rapid with no evidence of cross-immunity among Campylobacter species or genotypes. In nestlings, C. jejuni shedding was evident from 9 days of age but siblings were not readily co-infected. The dynamics of Campylobacter infection of starlings differed from that observed in commercial poultry and consequently there was no evidence that wild starlings represent a major source of Campylobacter infections of food animals or humans.
- Published
- 2016