Short review: Geographical distribution of equine-associated pVAPA plasmids in Rhodococcus equi in the world
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Abstract
Virulent Rhodococcus equi strains expressing virulence-associated 15–17 kDa protein (VapA) and having a large virulence plasmid (pVAPA) of 85–90 kb containing vapA gene are pathogenic for horses. In the last two decades, following pVAPA, two host-associated virulence plasmid types of R. equi have been discovered: a circular plasmid, pVAPB, associated with porcine isolates in 1995, and a recently detected linear plasmid, pVAPN, related to bovine and caprine isolates. Molecular epidemiological studies of R. equi infection in foals on horse-breeding farms in Japan and many countries around the world have been conducted in the last three decades, and the epidemiological studies using restriction enzyme digestion patterns of plasmid DNAs from virulent isolates have shown 14 distinct pVAPA subtypes and their geographical preference. This short review summarizes previous reports regarding equine-associated pVAPA subtypes in the world and discusses their geographic distribution from the standpoint of horse movements.
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Foals, Molecular epidemiology, Rhodococcus equi, Virulence plasmid
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English
Citation
Veterinary Microbiology, v. 287.





