Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae: Implications for monitoring

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Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae : Implications for monitoring. / Boot, R.; Nicklas, W.; Christensen, H.

I: Laboratory Animals, Bind 52, Nr. 3, 2018, s. 300-303.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Boot, R, Nicklas, W & Christensen, H 2018, 'Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae: Implications for monitoring', Laboratory Animals, bind 52, nr. 3, s. 300-303. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677218754597

APA

Boot, R., Nicklas, W., & Christensen, H. (2018). Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae: Implications for monitoring. Laboratory Animals, 52(3), 300-303. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677218754597

Vancouver

Boot R, Nicklas W, Christensen H. Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae: Implications for monitoring. Laboratory Animals. 2018;52(3):300-303. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677218754597

Author

Boot, R. ; Nicklas, W. ; Christensen, H. / Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae : Implications for monitoring. I: Laboratory Animals. 2018 ; Bind 52, Nr. 3. s. 300-303.

Bibtex

@article{f79d28f708ea48aeb567f84d26069aa4,
title = "Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae: Implications for monitoring",
abstract = "Pasteurellosis is a well-recognized disease with similar pathology in all laboratory rodent species. Pasteurella pneumotropica is the most frequently mentioned member of the Pasteurellaceae isolated from mice and rats. Numerous other Pasteurellaceae taxa have been obtained from mice, rats, and other rodent species. Recently, rodent Pasteurellaceae have been submitted to comprehensive genetic and phenotypic (polyphasic) taxonomic studies. As a result they are now classed within six validly published new genera, namely Cricetibacter, Mesocricetibacter, Mannheimia, Muribacter, Necropsobacter, and Rodentibacter. All previously used names such as P. pneumotropica have become obsolete. The new classification forms a firm basis for the correct phenotypic identification of Pasteurellaceae from laboratory animals and for the selection of strains for pathogenicity studies. Consequences of taxonomic changes notably involve molecular methods used for the detection of Pasteurellaceae infection in laboratory animal colonies. Testing may be done using primer sets that detect all Pasteurellaceae taxa or sets developed to detect host-specific members of the family.",
keywords = "molecular detection, nomenclature, Pasteurellaceae, rodent, taxonomy",
author = "R. Boot and W. Nicklas and H. Christensen",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1177/0023677218754597",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "300--303",
journal = "Laboratory Animals",
issn = "0023-6772",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae

T2 - Implications for monitoring

AU - Boot, R.

AU - Nicklas, W.

AU - Christensen, H.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Pasteurellosis is a well-recognized disease with similar pathology in all laboratory rodent species. Pasteurella pneumotropica is the most frequently mentioned member of the Pasteurellaceae isolated from mice and rats. Numerous other Pasteurellaceae taxa have been obtained from mice, rats, and other rodent species. Recently, rodent Pasteurellaceae have been submitted to comprehensive genetic and phenotypic (polyphasic) taxonomic studies. As a result they are now classed within six validly published new genera, namely Cricetibacter, Mesocricetibacter, Mannheimia, Muribacter, Necropsobacter, and Rodentibacter. All previously used names such as P. pneumotropica have become obsolete. The new classification forms a firm basis for the correct phenotypic identification of Pasteurellaceae from laboratory animals and for the selection of strains for pathogenicity studies. Consequences of taxonomic changes notably involve molecular methods used for the detection of Pasteurellaceae infection in laboratory animal colonies. Testing may be done using primer sets that detect all Pasteurellaceae taxa or sets developed to detect host-specific members of the family.

AB - Pasteurellosis is a well-recognized disease with similar pathology in all laboratory rodent species. Pasteurella pneumotropica is the most frequently mentioned member of the Pasteurellaceae isolated from mice and rats. Numerous other Pasteurellaceae taxa have been obtained from mice, rats, and other rodent species. Recently, rodent Pasteurellaceae have been submitted to comprehensive genetic and phenotypic (polyphasic) taxonomic studies. As a result they are now classed within six validly published new genera, namely Cricetibacter, Mesocricetibacter, Mannheimia, Muribacter, Necropsobacter, and Rodentibacter. All previously used names such as P. pneumotropica have become obsolete. The new classification forms a firm basis for the correct phenotypic identification of Pasteurellaceae from laboratory animals and for the selection of strains for pathogenicity studies. Consequences of taxonomic changes notably involve molecular methods used for the detection of Pasteurellaceae infection in laboratory animal colonies. Testing may be done using primer sets that detect all Pasteurellaceae taxa or sets developed to detect host-specific members of the family.

KW - molecular detection

KW - nomenclature

KW - Pasteurellaceae

KW - rodent

KW - taxonomy

U2 - 10.1177/0023677218754597

DO - 10.1177/0023677218754597

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29385897

AN - SCOPUS:85041927688

VL - 52

SP - 300

EP - 303

JO - Laboratory Animals

JF - Laboratory Animals

SN - 0023-6772

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 194914152