Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

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  • Contagious Porcine Pleuropneumonia especially of pigs under 6 months
  • Endemic in UK
  • 12 serotypes causing the same disease
  • Different serotypes in different regions, with serotypes 3,6 and 8 the most common in the UK
  • Pathogenesis and pathogenicity:
    • Virulent strains possess capsules which are antiphagocytic and immunogenic
    • Fimbriae allow the bacteria to attach to cells of the respiratory tract
    • Damaged neutrophils in the lungs produce lytic enzymes
    • The sustained inflammatory response causes tissue necrosis
    • Lungs consolidated and necrotic with fibrinous pleuisy at post mortem
    • Produce three cytotoxins which belong to the repeats-in-structural-toxin (RTX) cytolysin family
    • RTX toxins:
      • Several peptide repeats within the molecules
      • Produced by various Gram-negative bacteria
      • Possess four contiguous genes, A, B, C and D
      • A is the structural gene; B and D are required for secretion; C allows post-translational activation of the gene product of A into a functional product
      • ApxI is a strong haemolysin with cytolytic activity
      • ApxII is a weak haemolysin
      • ApxIII is a cytotoxin
      • Different Actinobacillus pleuropneumonia serotypes secrete a particular combination of toxins; American serotypes secrete ApxI and II; European serotypes secrete ApxII and III
      • Toxins introduce pores into cell membranes