International Journal of Medical Microbiology (Mar 2024)

Pasteurella multocida strains of a novel capsular serotype and lethal to Marmota himalayana on Qinghai-Tibet plateau in China

  • Ran Duan,
  • Dongyue Lyu,
  • Shuai Qin,
  • Junrong Liang,
  • Wenpeng Gu,
  • Qun Duan,
  • Weiwei Wu,
  • Deming Tang,
  • Haonan Han,
  • Xiaojin Zheng,
  • Jinxiao Xi,
  • Asaiti Bukai,
  • Xinmin Lu,
  • Peng Zhang,
  • Dan Zhang,
  • Meng Xiao,
  • Huaiqi Jing,
  • Xin Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 314
p. 151597

Abstract

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Pasteurella multocida is a zoonotic pathogen causing serious diseases in humans and animals. Here, we report P. multocida from wildlife on China's Qinghai-Tibet plateau with a novel capsular serotype, forming a single branch on the core-genome phylogenetic tree: four strains isolated from dead Himalayan marmot (Marmota himalayana) and one genome assembled from metagenomic sequencing of a dead Woolly hare (Lepus oiostolus). Four of the strains were identified as subspecies multocida and one was septica. The mouse model showed that the challenge strain killed mice within 24 h at an infectious dose of less than 300 bacteria. The short disease course is comparable to septicemic plague: the host has died before more severe pathological changes could take place. Though pathological changes were relatively mild, cytokine storm was obvious with a significant rise of IL-12p70, IL-6, TNF-αand IL-10 (P < 0.05). Our findings suggested P. multocida is a lethal pathogen for wildlife on Qinghai-Tibet plateau, in addition to Yersinia pestis. Individuals residing within the M. himalayana plague focus are at risk for P. multocida infection, and public health warnings are necessitated.

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