4.5 Article

Allisonella histaminiformans gen. nov., sp nov.: A novel bacterium that produces histamine, utilizes histicline as its sole energy source, and could play a role in bovine and equine laminitis

Journal

SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 498-506

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1078/07232020260517625

Keywords

Allisonella histaminiformans; bovine; cecum; equine; decarboxylase; histidine; histamine; rumen

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When cattle and horses are fed large amounts of grain, histamine can accumulate in the gastrointestinal tract, and-this accumulation can cause an acute inflammation of the hooves (laminitis). When ruminal fluid from dairy cattle fed grain supplements was serially diluted in anaerobic MRS medium containing histidine (50 mM), histamine was detected at dilutions as high as 10(-7). The histidine enrichments were then transferred successively in an anaerobic, carbonate-based medium (50 mM histidine) without glucose. The histamine producing bacteria could not be isolated from the rumens of cattle fed hay; however, histamine producing bacteria could be isolated the feces of cattle fed grain and the cecum of a horse. All of the histamine producing isolates had the same ovoid morphology. The cells stained Gram-negative and were resistant to the ionophore, monensin (25 muM). The doubling time was 110 min, and the yield was 1.5 mg cell protein per mmol histidine. The G+C content was 46.8%. Lysine was the only other amino acid used, but lysine did not allow growth if histidine was absent. Because carbohydrate and organic acid utilization was not detected, it appeared that the isolates used histidine decarboxylation as their sole mechanism of energy derivation. 16s rRNA gene sequencing indicated that the isolates were most closely related to low G+C Gram-positive bacteria (firmicutes), but similarities were less than or equal to94%. Because the most closely related bacteria (Dialister pneumonsintes, Megasphaera elsdenii and Selenomonas ruminantium) did not produce histamine from histidine, we propose that these histamine producing bacteria be assigned to a new genus, Allisonella, as Allisonella histaminiformans gen. nov., sp. nov. The type strain is MR2 (ATCC BAA610, DSM 15230).

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