Authors: |
Reynolds DL; School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68583-0907, dreynolds2@unl.edu., Hille MM; School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68583-0907., Jia B; Department of Health Management, Atlantic Veterinary College, University of Prince Edward Island, Prince Edward Island, Canada C1A 4P3. |
Language: |
English |
References: |
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Contributed Indexing: |
Keywords: Enterococcus faecalis; Enterococcus spp.; amyloid arthropathy; embryo mortality Local Abstract: [Publisher, Spanish; Castilian] Revisión de las infecciones causadas por Enterococcus faecalis en la avicultura comercial. Los organismos Enterococcus faecalis son cocos grampositivos que se encuentran en todas partes en el medio ambiente, en el agua y en el suelo, y son habitantes comensales de los tractos intestinales de animales vertebrados e invertebrados. Se los consideran oportunistas y poseen muchos rasgos que codifican para virulencia, incluida la formación de biopelículas y toxinas. Enterococcus faecalis produce una citolisina, que es una toxina única que tiene actividad contra células eucariotas y procariotas. La citolisina causa hemólisis de los glóbulos rojos y también se la ha denominado hemolisina. Los organismos El Enterococcus faecalis es intrínsecamente resistente a algunos antibióticos y pueden transmitir resistencia antimicrobiana a otros microorganismos. En la avicultura comercial, existe amplia evidencia que indica que E. faecalis puede transmitirse a través del huevo, lo que provoca una disminución de la incubabilidad del huevo. Se ha descubierto que Enterococcus faecalis se propaga rápidamente entre los pollitos recién eclosionados que están expuestos en la nacedora. En las aves de mayor edad, algunas cepas de E. faecalis causan artropatía amiloide. Se han desarrollado varios métodos para evaluar las cepas de E. faecalis en busca de características que codifican la virulencia, como la tipificación de secuencias de locus múltiples y los ensayos de letalidad embrionaria. Sin embargo, existe una gran variabilidad en la interpretación de los resultados de estos métodos y no se ha establecido bien la correlación entre genotipos, fenotipos y virulencia. Es necesario dilucidar más los rasgos de virulencia y la patogénesis de E. faecalis en la avicultura. |
PMID: |
40249580 |
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