Actinomycetes

From WikiVet English
Jump to navigation Jump to search
BACK TO INFECTIOUS AGENTS AND PARASITES
BACK TO BACTERIA
  • Thermactinomyces vulgaris may cause COPD


Overview

  • Gram positive bacteria
  • Grow slowly on media and produce branching filaments
  • Opportunistic infections causing inflammatory responses and granulomatous reactions
  • Animal pathogens include Actinomyces, Arcanobacterium, Actinobaculum, Nocardia and Dermatophilus


Actinomyces, Arcanobacterium and Actinobaculum species

  • Non-motile, non-spore-forming bacteria
  • Anaerobic or facultative anaerobes
  • Grow on enriched media; non-acid fast
  • Colonise mucous membranes
  • Arcanobacterium pyogenes
    • Characteristics:
      • Formerly known as Actinomyces pyogenes and Corynebacterium pyogenes
      • Small rod
      • Grows slowly on blood agar to produce small, white colonies surrounded by a zone of beta-haemolysis after 48 hours
      • Coryneform morphology, like Chinese characters; may be curved with slightly swollen ends
      • Found in nasopharyngeal mucosa and genital tract of cattle, sheep, pigs
    • Pathogenicity
      • Opportunistic infections following injury or viral/mycoplasma infection in ruminants and pigs
      • Extracellular toxins including haemolysin, proteases, DNase and neurominidase
      • Haemolytic toxin, pyolysin, member of the thiol-activated cytolysins (pore-forming toxins); possibly cytotoxic to phagocytic cells
    • Clinical infections:
      • Suppurative infections
      • Abscesses especially in liver
      • Pyometra
      • Summer mastitis
      • Ovine foot disease
      • Umbilical infections
      • Pneumonia
  • Actinomyces
  • Usually long and filamentous branching Gram positive rods
    • Actinomyces bovis found naturally in oral cavity of cattle; prefers anaerobic conditions but not strict anaerobe; penetrates injured tissues to cause granulomatous lesions of soft tissues and bone, causing lumpy jaw; organisms found in sulphur granules
    • Actinomyces viscosus commensal of oral cavity of dogs and humans; causes localised abscesses of skin or granulomatous lesions in thorax which may spread to abdomen causing pyothorax; rods contained in soft grey granules which release the organism when squashed


  • Actinbaculum suis in preputial mucosa of boars
  • Actinobaculum have a coryneform morphology

Nocardia

  • Aerobic short branching rods
  • Cell wall contains mycolic acids (hence slightly acid fast)
  • Nocardia asteroides found in soil
  • Causes granulomatous lesions in animals
  • Survives and multiplies in macrophages
  • Chronic, progressive disease
  • Lesions difficult to treat due to resistance of organisms to many antimicrobials (e.g. penicillins)