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Tuberculosis in wild seals and characterisation of the seal bacillus
Authors:DV COUSINS  SN WILLIAMS  R REUTER†  D FORSHAW†  B CHADWICK§  D COUGHRAN¶  P COLLINS#  N GALES
Institution:*Australian Reference Laboratory for Bovine Tuberculosis, Department of Agriculture, South Perth, Western Australia 6151;?Veterinary Pathology Services, PO Box 96, Plympton, South Australia 5038;?Department of Agriculture, Albany, Western Australia 6330;§Division of Veterinary Biology, Murdoch Veterinary School, Murdoch, Western Australia 6150;¶Department of Conservation and Land Management, Como, Western Australia 6152;#Department of Conservation and Land Management, Albany, Western Australia 6330;**Atlantis Marine Park, Yanchep, Western Australia 6035
Abstract:SUMMARY Tuberculosis was diagnosed in 3 otariid seals found dead on beaches at 3 locations on the south coast of Western Australian between May 1990 and March 1991. This confirms that tuberculosis is present in the 2 native seals (Neophoca cinerea and Arctocephalus forsteri) in Western Australian waters. Mycobacterium sp isolated from the lungs of 2 of the seals were studied to determine the similarity of the strains to each other, to the strains isolated during 1986 from Australian sea lions and New Zealand fur seals kept in captivity at a marine park near Perth, Western Australia, and to a strain isolated in 1988 from a seal trainer who worked with the infected captive seals for 3 years. After restriction endonuclease analysis (REA) with the endonucleases Bst Ell, Bcl I and Pvu II, one of the wild seal strains appeared to have identical DNA fragment patterns to the strains from the captive seals and the seal trainer. The other wild seal isolate had identical REA profiles using Bst EII and Bcl I, but a minor difference was detected using Pvu II. Differences in these isolates were more clearly seen in restriction fragment length polymorphisms after hybridisation with two DNA probes. The secretory protein MPB70, present in M bovis, was not detected in wild seal isolates using sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting techniques. Analysis of protein and DNA fragment profiles indicated that seal tuberculosis isolates form a unique cluster within the M tuberculosis complex.
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