4.7 Article

Canine brucellosis in Costa Rica reveals widespread Brucella canis infection and the recent introduction of foreign strains

Journal

VETERINARY MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 257, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2021.109072

Keywords

Brucellosis; Brucella canis; Brucella abortus; Dogs; Evolution; Phylogeny; MLVA

Funding

  1. Fondos del Sistema del Consejo Nacional de Rectores (FEES CONARE) CR
  2. Fondos Grupos de Investigacion [803-C0-456]
  3. Vicerrectoria de Investigacion
  4. Universidad de Costa Rica
  5. Espacio Universitario de Estudios Avanzados
  6. UCREA from the Presidency of University of Costa Rica [B8762]
  7. Fondos from the Vice Presidency for Research
  8. University of Costa Rica [C0456]
  9. Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnologia y Telecomunicaciones (MICITT-PINN) [PND033 - 15-2]
  10. University of Costa Rica scholarships project [803B4.5010, 17 12-15]

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Brucellosis is a prevalent disease in Costa Rica, with a significant number of pet dogs infected with Brucella strains introduced from Mexico and Panama. The study identified three main lineages of B. canis CR strains, with fatty acid methyl ester analysis revealing five different groups. Phylogenetic analysis showed mutations occurring independently in various lineages of B. canis strains.
Brucellosis is a prevalent disease in Costa Rica (CR), with an increasing number of human infections. Close to half of homes in CR have one or more dogs, corresponding to similar to 1.4 million canines, most of them in the Central Valley within or near the cities of San Jose, Heredia, and Alajuela. From 302 dog sera collected from this region, 19 were positive for Brucella canis antigens, and five had antibodies against smooth lipopolysaccharide, suggesting infections by both B. canis and other Brucella species. B. canis strains were isolated in the Central Valley from 26 kennel dogs and three pet dogs, all displaying clinical signs of canine brucellosis. We detected three recent introductions of different B. canis strains in kennels: two traced from Mexico and one from Panama. Multiple locus-variable number tandem repeats (MLVA-16) and whole-genome sequencing (WGSA) analyses showed that B. canis CR strains comprise three main lineages. The tree topologies obtained by WGSA and MLVA-16 just partially agreed, indicating that the latter analysis is not suitable for phylogenetic studies. The fatty acid methyl ester analysis resolved five different B. canis groups, showing less resolution power than the MLVA-16 and WGSA. Lactobacillic acid was absent in linages I and II but present in linage III, supporting the recent introductions of B. canis strains from Mexico. B. canis displaying putative functional cyclopropane synthase for the synthesis of lactobacillic acid are phylogenetically intertwined with B. canis with non-functional protein, indicating that mutations have occurred independently in the various lineages.

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