Chlamydia and Chlamydophila species
Chlamydophila psittaci involved in feline rhinotracheitis together with herpes virus 1 C.psittaci more frequently infects the conjunctival epithelium -> chronic conjunctivitis, see feline chlamydiosis
- May cause arthritis in sheep and arthritis in cattle
Overview
Characteristics
- Obligate intracellular bacteria
- Gram negative bacteria with outer membrane, LPS, ribosomes, DNA and RNA
- Peptidoglycan cell wall resistant to lysozyme
- Only grow in presence of living eukaryotic cells
- Unable to synthesis ATP therefore require intermediates from host cells
- Grow in embyonated eggs and McCoy cells as well as animal tissues
- Not stained by Gram stain
- Kosters (modified Ziehl-Neelson, small red rods) or fluorescent antibody stain required for detection
- Blue inclusions in cytoplasm of Giemsa-stained cels
- Antigen detection kits for diagnosis from swabs
Pathogenesis and pathogenicity
- Elementary body, the infective form, phagocytosed and internalised into host epithelial cells
- Transformation into larger reticulate body
- Reticulate body divides by binary fission to form many new chlamydia cells
- Reticulate body has un-crosslinked peptidoglycan, which is cross-linked to form elementary bodies
- Elementary bodies released from dying host cells to infect other cells
- Persistent infections
- Many infections subclinical due to intracellular existence of chlamydia preventing inflammatory reactions
- Clinical infections occur in non-natural host species
Chlamydophila psittaci
- Causes notifiable psittacosis in birds
Chlamydophila abortus
- Ovine enzootic abortion
- Contagious ovine abortion in late pregnancy
- Infection via ingestion or inhalation causes a bacteraemia
- Bacteria localise in placenta and cause placentitis, leading to abortion
- Abortion rates may reach 30%
- Fertility not impaired
- Survival of elementary bodies in faeces and wild birds are a source of infection from one lambing season to the next
- Ewes may be carriers for several years
- Venereal transmission from infected rams
- Some immunity develops after infection, protecting ewes from subsequent disease
- Vaccines prevent infection but will not clear infection from persistently-infected animals
- Vaccination of ewe lambs
Chlamydophila felis
- Host adapted species in cats
- Feline interstitial pneumonia and conjunctivitis
- Diagnosis by antigen detection in ocular/nasal secretions - ELISA, PCR, Kosters, fluorescent antibody test
- Vaccine