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The limitations of commercial serological assays for detection of chlamydial infections in Australian livestock
Chlamydia pecorumand Chlamydia abortus are related ruminant pathogens endemic to different global regions. Potential co-infections combined with the lack of species-specific serological assays challenge accurate diagnosis. Serological screening revealed low C. abortus seropositivity with the peptide-based ELISA (1/84; 1.2%) in Australian sheep yet moderate seropositivity in a Swiss flock with history of C. abortus-associated abortions (17/63; 26.9%). By whole cell antigen complement fixation tests (CFT) and ELISA, chlamydial seropositivity was significantly higher in all groups, suggesting cross-reactivity between these two chlamydial species and non-specificity of the tests. However, only C. pecorum DNA could be detected by qPCR in Chlamydia seropositive Australian animals screened, suggesting chlamydial seropositivity was due to cross-reactivity with endemic C. pecorum infections. These results suggest ascribing Chlamydia seropositivity to chlamydial species in livestock using whole-cell antigen CFT or ELISA should be treated with caution; and that peptide-based ELISA and qPCR provide greater chlamydial species-specificity.
Funding
Australian Research Council
Central West Livestock Health and Pest Authority
McGarvie Smith Institute
NSW Department of Primary Industry
Tablelands Livestock Health and Pest Authority
University of the Sunshine Coast
History
Publication title
Journal of Medical MicrobiologyVolume
68Issue
4Pagination
627-632ISSN
0022-2615Department/School
School of Natural SciencesPublisher
The Microbiology SocietyPlace of publication
Marlborough House, Basingstoke Rd, Spencers Woods, Reading, England, Berks, Rg7 1AgRights statement
Copyright 2019 The AuthorsRepository Status
- Restricted