Genre
- Journal Article
Toxigenic strains of P. multocida were readily differentiated from non-toxigenic strains by an agarose overlay method using bovine turbinate cells or bovine lung cells. Cells which were young and densely confluent were best suited to this assay. The incubation period required to distinguish toxigenic strains was dependent on the confluence of the monolayers, which was affected by the seeding rate, cell passage level and growth time before overlay. The agarose overlay method correctly identified 11 of 11 reference strains of P. multocida, and visible cytotoxic changes were present in the monolayers after 48 to 65 h. Outbreaks of the enzootic form of atrophic rhinitis in 2 New South Wales piggeries were associated with the isolation of toxigenic type D strains of P. multocida.
Eamens, G. J.: Dep. Agric., Cent. Vet. Lab., Glenfield, N.S.W. 2167, Australia.
Language
- English
Subjects
- Swine
- hogs
- bacterial infections
- animals
- Suiformes
- pig diseases
- Sus
- eukaryotes
- pigs
- Pasteurella
- bacteria
- swine diseases
- Pasteurella multocida
- Atrophic rhinitis
- Sus scrofa
- Chordata
- Suidae
- Artiodactyla
- bacterial diseases
- Infection
- Respiratory diseases
- ungulates
- mammals
- vertebrates
- bacterioses
- lung diseases
- prokaryotes