Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2012)

Mycoplasmosis in Ferrets

  • Matti Kiupel,
  • Danielle R. Desjardins,
  • Ailam Lim,
  • Carole Bolin,
  • Cathy A. Johnson-Delaney,
  • James H. Resau,
  • Michael M. Garner,
  • Steven R. Bolin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1811.120072
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 11
pp. 1763 – 1770

Abstract

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We report an outbreak of severe respiratory disease associated with a novel Mycoplasma species in ferrets. During 2009–2012, a respiratory disease characterized by nonproductive coughing affected ≈8,000 ferrets, 6–8 weeks of age, which had been imported from a breeding facility in Canada. Almost 95% became ill, but almost none died. Treatments temporarily decreased all clinical signs except cough. Postmortem examinations of euthanized ferrets revealed bronchointerstitial pneumonia with prominent hyperplasia of bronchiole-associated lymphoid tissue. Immunohistochemical analysis with polyclonal antibody against Mycoplasma bovis demonstrated intense staining along the bronchiolar brush border. Bronchoalveolar lavage samples from 12 affected ferrets yielded fast-growing, glucose-fermenting mycoplasmas. Nucleic acid sequence analysis of PCR-derived amplicons from portions of the 16S rDNA and RNA polymerase B genes failed to identify the mycoplasmas but showed that they were most similar to M. molare and M. lagogenitalium. These findings indicate a causal association between the novel Mycoplasma species and the newly recognized pulmonary disease.

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