Parallel sequencing reveals Campylobacter spp. In commercial meat chickens less than 8 days old

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Parallel sequencing reveals Campylobacter spp. In commercial meat chickens less than 8 days old. / Colles, F. M.; Hedges, S. J.; Dixon, R.; Preston, S. G.; Thornhill, P.; Barfod, K. K.; Gebhardt-Henrich, S. G.; Créach, P.; Maiden, M. C.J.; Dawkins, M. S.; Smith, A. L.

In: Applied and Environmental Microbiology, Vol. 87, No. 23, e01060-21, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Colles, FM, Hedges, SJ, Dixon, R, Preston, SG, Thornhill, P, Barfod, KK, Gebhardt-Henrich, SG, Créach, P, Maiden, MCJ, Dawkins, MS & Smith, AL 2021, 'Parallel sequencing reveals Campylobacter spp. In commercial meat chickens less than 8 days old', Applied and Environmental Microbiology, vol. 87, no. 23, e01060-21. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01060-21

APA

Colles, F. M., Hedges, S. J., Dixon, R., Preston, S. G., Thornhill, P., Barfod, K. K., Gebhardt-Henrich, S. G., Créach, P., Maiden, M. C. J., Dawkins, M. S., & Smith, A. L. (2021). Parallel sequencing reveals Campylobacter spp. In commercial meat chickens less than 8 days old. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 87(23), [e01060-21]. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01060-21

Vancouver

Colles FM, Hedges SJ, Dixon R, Preston SG, Thornhill P, Barfod KK et al. Parallel sequencing reveals Campylobacter spp. In commercial meat chickens less than 8 days old. Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 2021;87(23). e01060-21. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01060-21

Author

Colles, F. M. ; Hedges, S. J. ; Dixon, R. ; Preston, S. G. ; Thornhill, P. ; Barfod, K. K. ; Gebhardt-Henrich, S. G. ; Créach, P. ; Maiden, M. C.J. ; Dawkins, M. S. ; Smith, A. L. / Parallel sequencing reveals Campylobacter spp. In commercial meat chickens less than 8 days old. In: Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 2021 ; Vol. 87, No. 23.

Bibtex

@article{ff65ab46ee364457ae590a12bccc799a,
title = "Parallel sequencing reveals Campylobacter spp. In commercial meat chickens less than 8 days old",
abstract = "Campylobacter from contaminated poultry meat is a major source of human gastroenteritis worldwide. To date, attempts to control this zoonotic infection with on-farm biosecurity measures have been inconsistent in outcome. A cornerstone of these efforts has been the detection of chicken infection with microbiological culture, where Campylobacter is generally not detectable until birds are at least 21 days old. Using parallel sequence-based bacterial 16S profiling analysis and targeted sequencing of the porA gene, Campylobacter was identified at very low levels in all commercial flocks at less than 8 days old that were tested from the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and France. These young chicks exhibited a much greater diversity of porA types than older birds testing positive for Campylobacter by culture or quantitative PCR (qPCR). This suggests that as the bacteria multiply sufficiently to be detected by culture methods, one or two variants, as indicated by porA type, dominate the infection. The findings that (i) most young chicks carry some Campylobacter and (ii) not all flocks become Campylobacter positive by culture suggest that efforts to control infection, and therefore avoid contamination of poultry meat, should concentrate on how to limit Campylobacter to low levels by the prevention of the overgrowth of single strains. IMPORTANCE Our results demonstrate the presence of Campylobacter DNA among fecal samples from a range of commercially reared meat chicks that are less than 8 days of age, consistent across 3 European countries. The recently developed, sensitive detection method indicates that infection occurs on commercial farms much earlier and more widely than previously thought, which opens up new opportunities to control Campylobacter contamination at the start of the food chain and reduce the unacceptably high levels of human disease.",
keywords = "Broiler chickens, Campylobacter",
author = "Colles, {F. M.} and Hedges, {S. J.} and R. Dixon and Preston, {S. G.} and P. Thornhill and Barfod, {K. K.} and Gebhardt-Henrich, {S. G.} and P. Cr{\'e}ach and Maiden, {M. C.J.} and Dawkins, {M. S.} and Smith, {A. L.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: Copyright {\textcopyright} 2021 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1128/AEM.01060-21",
language = "English",
volume = "87",
journal = "Applied and Environmental Microbiology",
issn = "0099-2240",
publisher = "American Society for Microbiology",
number = "23",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Parallel sequencing reveals Campylobacter spp. In commercial meat chickens less than 8 days old

AU - Colles, F. M.

AU - Hedges, S. J.

AU - Dixon, R.

AU - Preston, S. G.

AU - Thornhill, P.

AU - Barfod, K. K.

AU - Gebhardt-Henrich, S. G.

AU - Créach, P.

AU - Maiden, M. C.J.

AU - Dawkins, M. S.

AU - Smith, A. L.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2021 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Campylobacter from contaminated poultry meat is a major source of human gastroenteritis worldwide. To date, attempts to control this zoonotic infection with on-farm biosecurity measures have been inconsistent in outcome. A cornerstone of these efforts has been the detection of chicken infection with microbiological culture, where Campylobacter is generally not detectable until birds are at least 21 days old. Using parallel sequence-based bacterial 16S profiling analysis and targeted sequencing of the porA gene, Campylobacter was identified at very low levels in all commercial flocks at less than 8 days old that were tested from the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and France. These young chicks exhibited a much greater diversity of porA types than older birds testing positive for Campylobacter by culture or quantitative PCR (qPCR). This suggests that as the bacteria multiply sufficiently to be detected by culture methods, one or two variants, as indicated by porA type, dominate the infection. The findings that (i) most young chicks carry some Campylobacter and (ii) not all flocks become Campylobacter positive by culture suggest that efforts to control infection, and therefore avoid contamination of poultry meat, should concentrate on how to limit Campylobacter to low levels by the prevention of the overgrowth of single strains. IMPORTANCE Our results demonstrate the presence of Campylobacter DNA among fecal samples from a range of commercially reared meat chicks that are less than 8 days of age, consistent across 3 European countries. The recently developed, sensitive detection method indicates that infection occurs on commercial farms much earlier and more widely than previously thought, which opens up new opportunities to control Campylobacter contamination at the start of the food chain and reduce the unacceptably high levels of human disease.

AB - Campylobacter from contaminated poultry meat is a major source of human gastroenteritis worldwide. To date, attempts to control this zoonotic infection with on-farm biosecurity measures have been inconsistent in outcome. A cornerstone of these efforts has been the detection of chicken infection with microbiological culture, where Campylobacter is generally not detectable until birds are at least 21 days old. Using parallel sequence-based bacterial 16S profiling analysis and targeted sequencing of the porA gene, Campylobacter was identified at very low levels in all commercial flocks at less than 8 days old that were tested from the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and France. These young chicks exhibited a much greater diversity of porA types than older birds testing positive for Campylobacter by culture or quantitative PCR (qPCR). This suggests that as the bacteria multiply sufficiently to be detected by culture methods, one or two variants, as indicated by porA type, dominate the infection. The findings that (i) most young chicks carry some Campylobacter and (ii) not all flocks become Campylobacter positive by culture suggest that efforts to control infection, and therefore avoid contamination of poultry meat, should concentrate on how to limit Campylobacter to low levels by the prevention of the overgrowth of single strains. IMPORTANCE Our results demonstrate the presence of Campylobacter DNA among fecal samples from a range of commercially reared meat chicks that are less than 8 days of age, consistent across 3 European countries. The recently developed, sensitive detection method indicates that infection occurs on commercial farms much earlier and more widely than previously thought, which opens up new opportunities to control Campylobacter contamination at the start of the food chain and reduce the unacceptably high levels of human disease.

KW - Broiler chickens

KW - Campylobacter

U2 - 10.1128/AEM.01060-21

DO - 10.1128/AEM.01060-21

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34550767

AN - SCOPUS:85120076995

VL - 87

JO - Applied and Environmental Microbiology

JF - Applied and Environmental Microbiology

SN - 0099-2240

IS - 23

M1 - e01060-21

ER -

ID: 286629655