Francisella tularensis

From WikiVet English
Jump to navigation Jump to search
BACK TO INFECTIOUS AGENTS AND PARASITES
BACK TO BACTERIA

Overview

  • Causes tularaemia in animals and humans
  • Wildlife reservoir of infection, including rabbits, rodents, galliform birds and deer
  • Survives in the soil for up to 4 months
  • Type A strains associated with terrestrial animal reservoirs; type B strains with water-borne infections and aquatic animals
  • Ticks and deerfly act as vectors


Characteristics

  • Gram negative rod with coccobacillary appearance
  • Non-moltile, obligate aerobe
  • Oxidase negative, weakly catalase positive
  • Fastidious, requiring cysteine for growth on blood agar
  • No growth on MacConkey
  • Facultative intracellular pathogen


Pathogenesis and pathogenicity

  • High lipid content; virulent isolates produce capsules
  • Highly virulent type A stains, F. tularensis subspecies tularensis in North America; less virulent type B strains, F. tularensis subspecies holarctica in Eurasia and North America


Clinical infections