Clostridium perfringens produces diverse virulent toxins that cause necrotic enteritis in poultry, resulting in a great negative impact on the poultry industry. To study the characteristics of C. perfringens in chickens, we isolated 88 strains from chickens (1 strain per flock) with necrotic enteritis. The isolated bacterial strains were screened for toxin type and antimicrobial susceptibility. Necropsy of 17 chickens that died from necrotic enteritis revealed that their intestines were dilated with inflammatory exudates and characterized by mucosal necrosis. All the isolated strains were identified as toxin type A using multiplex PCR for toxin typing. We found that the rate of netB-positive strains isolated from dead chickens was significantly higher (8 of 17) than the rate among healthy chickens (2 of 50). We performed antimicrobial susceptibility test with 20 selected antimicrobial agents using the disk diffusion test and found that 30 tested strains were completely resistant to 5 antibiotics and partially resistant to 6 antibiotics whereas all the strains were susceptible to 9 antimicrobial agents. Using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis, the 17 strains were divided into 13 genetic clusters showing high genetic diversity. In conclusion, C. perfringens strains isolated from Korean poultry showed a high resistance to antimicrobial drugs and high genetic diversity, suggesting that continuous monitoring is essential to prevent outbreaks of necrotic enteritis in chickens.
Infectious bursal disease (IBD) is one of the most important immunosuppressive diseases of young chickens, causing considerable economic losses to the poultry industry. More than 30 years ago, an antigenic variant (av) pathotype of the IBD virus (IBDV) was reported to originate in, and subsequently spread among, poultry farms in the USA. Recently, a novel avIBDV lineage was identified in China and was shown to exhibit clear differences in its pathogenicity as well as molecular characteristics compared with the previously isolated variant strains. In this study, we conducted a passive surveillance of chicken carcasses submitted to our research division from June-December 2019, and detected the IBDV strains by reverse transcription PCR. Five avIBDV strains were isolated, and their pathogenicity was determined by necropsy and molecular analysis. Additionally, a coinfection field case involving an avIBDV strain and a very virulent IBDV (vvIBDV) strain was identified. Multiple sequence alignment and phylogenetic analysis of partial viral protein 1 (VP1) and hypervariable region (hv) VP2 genes revealed that those strains originated from two different avIBDV lineages. The co-occurrence of two subgroups of avIBDVs in South Korea confirms for the first time the evolution of antigenic variant IBDV strains, and highlights the urgency for the development of new strategies for IBDV intervention in South Korea. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS:. Five avIBDV strains were identified in South Korea by passive surveillance test in 2019.. A coinfection between two IBDV strains from different genogroups was reported in a field case.. By phylogenetic analysis, Korean avIBDVs belonged to two distinct lineages of antigenic variant genogroup.
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