Article: Marine Mammal Brucella Reference Strains Are Attenuated in a BALB/c 
Mouse Model

Authors: Nymo, Arias,Pardo, Alvarez, Alcaraz, Godfroid, Jiménez de Bagüés

Journal: PLOS ONE, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150432

Available here: 
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0150432

Abstract:

Brucellosis is a zoonosis of worldwide distribution with numerous animal host 
species. Since the novel isolation of Brucella spp. from marine mammals in 1994 
the bacteria have been isolated from various marine mammal hosts. The marine 
mammal reference strains Brucella pinnipedialis 12890 (harbour seal, Phoca 
vitulina) and Brucella ceti 12891 (harbour porpoise,Phocoena phocoena) were 
included in genus Brucella in 2007, however, their pathogenicity in the mouse 
model is pending. Herein this is evaluated in BALB/c mice with Brucella suis 
1330 as a control. Both marine mammal strains were attenuated, however, B. ceti 
was present at higher levels than B. pinnipedialis in blood, spleen and liver 
throughout the infection, in additionB. suis and B. ceti were isolated from 
brains and faeces at times with high levels of bacteraemia. In B. suis-infected 
mice serum cytokines peaked at day 7. In B. pinnipedialis-infected mice, levels 
were similar, but peaked predominantly at day 3 and an earlier peak in spleen 
weight likewise implied an earlier response. The inflammatory response induced 
pathology in the spleen and liver. In B. ceti-infected mice, most serum 
cytokine levels were comparable to those in uninfected mice, consistent with a 
limited inflammatory response, which also was indicated by restricted spleen 
and liver pathology. Specific immune responses against all three strains were 
detected in vitro after stimulation of splenocytes from infected mice with the 
homologous heat-killed brucellae. Antibody responses in vivo were also induced 
by the three brucellae. The immunological pattern of B. ceti in combination 
with persistence in organs and limited pathology has heretofore not been 
described for other brucellae. These two marine mammal wildtype strains show an 
attenuated pattern in BALB/c mice only previously described for Brucella 
neotomea.

Ingebjørg Helena Nymo
DVM, PhD

Post Doctoral Researcher
Research Group of Arctic Infection Biology
Department of Arctic and Marine Biology
Faculty of Biosciences, Fisheries and Economics
University of Tromsø - The Arctic University of Norway
Phone: +47 918 38 421 / mail: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
https://uit.no/om/enhet/ansatte/person?p_document_id=360200&p_dimension_id=88165

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