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Comparison of DNA:DNA homology and enzymatic activity between Pasteurella haemolytica and related species
1990
Bingham, D.P. | Moore, R. | Richards, A.B.
A commercially available microbiological identification system and DNA:DNA hybridization were used to determine relationships between and within serovars 1-13 of Pasteurella haemolytica, and between P haemolytica and P multocida and 4 species of Actinobacillus. All serovars of P haemolytica that belonged to biovar A were related with mean DNA homology of 78%, whereas all serovars of P haemolytica that belonged to biovar T were related to each other with mean DNA homology of 90%. The DNA:DNA hybridization between strains of biovars A and T ranged from 3 to 13%, indicating little or no genetic relationship between the 2 biovars of P haemolytica. The DNA homology between all serovars of P haemolytica and other species of non-P haemolytica bacteria tested (P multocida and actinobacilli) was < 14%, suggestive of essentially no genetic relationship of P haemolytica with the ATCC reference strains of the genus Pasteurella or the genus Actinobacillus. Enzymatic differences were observed between P haemolytica and the other non-P haemolytica bacteria tested; however, the microbiological identification system that uses enzymatic reactions could not distinguish among biovars of P haemolytica. Results of this research support other data that suggest that biovars A and T of P haemolytica should be classified as separate species, but do not support the inclusion of either biovar A or T within the genus Actinobacillus.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Genetic comparison of ovine and bovine pestiviruses
1990
Kelling, C.L. | Kennedy, J.E. | Stine, L.C. | Rump, K.K. | Paul, P.S. | Partridge, J.E.
Viral RNA oligonucleotide fingerprinting was used to compare genetic relationships among pestiviruses originating from ovine or bovine host species. Ovine pestiviruses, including reference border disease virus and 2 border disease isolates originating from natural pestivirus infections of sheep, appeared to have a more distant genetic relationship among themselves than with certain bovine pestiviruses. A closer genetic relatedness was evident between border disease virus and 3 noncytopathic bovine pestiviruses, including Draper bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV), a BVDV isolate that originated from aborted bovine fetuses, and a virus that was isolated from the serum of a calf that had a chronic BVDV infection. Four noncytopathic bovine viruses, including Draper BVDV and 3 field isolates, were closely related. Reference Oregon C24V BVDV, a cytopathic virus, was closely related to only 1 of the 7 noncytopathic viruses in this study.
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