4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

The molecular biology of Pasteurella multocida

Journal

VETERINARY MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 72, Issue 1-2, Pages 3-25

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0378-1135(99)00183-2

Keywords

Pasteurella multocida; molecular biology; genetics

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Pasteurella multocida is an important veterinary and opportunistic human pathogen. The species is diverse and complex with respect to antigenic variation, host predeliction and pathogenesis. Certain serological types are the aetiologic agents of severe pasteurellosis, such as fowl cholera in domestic and wild birds, bovine haemorrhagic septicaemia and porcine atrophic rhinitis. The recent application of molecular methods such as the polymerase chain reaction, restriction endonuclease analysis, ribotyping, pulsed-held gel electrophoresis, gene cloning, characterisation and recombinant protein expression, mutagenesis, plasmid and bacteriophage analysis and genomic mapping, have greatly increased our understanding of P. multocida and has provided researchers with a number of molecular tools to study pathogenesis and epidemiology at a molecular level. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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