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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Streptococcus canis infection in dogs with ulcerative keratitis

By Enache, Andra E et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2020·Animal Health Trust, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Streptococcus canis multilocus sequence typing in a case series of dogs with ulcerative keratitis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Four pugs were diagnosed with ulcerative keratitis, a painful eye condition, and samples from their eyes showed the presence of a specific type of bacteria called Streptococcus canis. Genetic testing revealed that these bacteria were related to other strains found in similar eye infections in dogs. This suggests that certain strains of S. canis may be more likely to cause eye problems in dogs. Understanding these bacteria better could help in developing treatments for eye infections in pets.

People also search for: pug eye infection treatment · ulcerative keratitis in dogs · Streptococcus canis in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether four isolates of Streptococcus canis (S canis) recovered from dogs diagnosed with ulcerative keratitis at the Animal Health Trust (AHT) were genetically related to other ocular isolates that are registered in the online database. ANIMAL STUDIED: Four S canis corneal isolates. PROCEDURES: Clinical and laboratory records between 2016 and 2017 were searched for dogs with ulcerative keratitis for which microbiology analysis was consistent with the growth of S canis. Genomic DNA was extracted for sequencing (Illumina MiSeq), and multilocus sequence types (STs) were determined using MLST 1.8 relative to the 44 sequence types of S canis available. A neighbor-joining tree was constructed in MEGA v4.0. A two-sided Fisher's exact test was used to determine any associations between the isolated strains and ocular infections of dogs. RESULTS: Four strains were isolated from pugs (cases 1-4) with ulcerative keratitis. Genome sequencing identified ST-27 (case 1), ST-9 (case 3), and ST-13 (cases 2 and 4). STs 13 and 27 are members of Clonal Complex (CC)-13. Analysis of the multilocus sequence typing database revealed that CC-13 strains accounted for six of the twelve isolates recovered from the eye exudates of dogs (P = .0078). CONCLUSIONS: There is early evidence that the CC-13 group of S canis is associated with ocular infections in dogs. We provide draft genome sequences toward the future identification of virulence mechanisms associated with streptococcal keratitis in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31566875/