Canadian Poultry Magazine

Enterococcus co-infection makes colibacillosis deadlier in poultry

By Canadian Poultry magazine   

News Health

Infection causes septicemia, organ failure and death.

Researchers from North Carolina State University have found that when a particular strain of Enterococcus is found alongside E. coli in cases of avian colibacillosis, there is a higher rate of fatality than when the infection is caused by E. coli alone.

Avian colibacillosis is an infection caused by a strain of E. coli called avian pathogenic E. coli (APEC). Specifically adapted to birds, it can cause septicemia, organ failure and death.

“The way we rear poultry can create a perfect storm of colibacillosis,” says Grayson Walker, a combined DVM and Ph.D. student in Luke Borst’s laboratory at NC State’s College of Veterinary Medicine and first author of the study. “If one egg in a hatchery is contaminated, it could spread to an entire farm.”

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Walker and his colleagues observed six poultry flocks – three chicken flocks and three turkey flocks – for over a three-year period, taking post-mortem samples from birds suspected to have colibacillosis and culturing them to see which bacteria were present. They cultured both Enterococcus faecalis (EF) bacteria and APEC from many of the samples, and wanted to find out whether the presence of both bacteria increased mortality rates in birds. Enterococcus species are normally present in the gastrointestinal tracts of birds, but some strains – such as EF – have recently been associated with more serious infections in birds.

“Given the prevalence of co-isolated pathogens in post-mortem samples, we hypothesized that co-infections are more likely to result in death of the animal compared to single-species infections from which birds may be more likely to recover,” Walker says.

The researchers created an embryo infection model, in which embryos were exposed to just EF, just APEC, or both. The researchers found that co-infection with both APEC and EF resulted in a 95 per cent mortality rate, which was three times higher than that caused by EF alone (32 per cent) and substantially more than APEC alone (59 per cent).

“This is a preliminary study,” Walker says. “Our next steps will involve looking more closely at synergies between these pathogens in colibacillosis. But we do know that all poultry are affected by this disease, it’s expensive for the industry, and Enterococcus could be playing a previously unknown role in its progression.”

The study appears in Avian Pathology, and was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health. Luke Borst, associate professor of veterinary anatomic pathology, is corresponding author. Siddhartha Thakur, professor of population health and pathobiology, veterinary residents Sesny Gall and Laura Chen, and research specialist Mitsu Suyemoto also contributed to the work.


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