977
Views
38
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Letter to the Editor

Multilocus sequence typing identifies an avian-like Chlamydia psittaci strain involved in equine placentitis and associated with subsequent human psittacosis

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 1-3 | Received 06 Oct 2016, Accepted 07 Dec 2016, Published online: 15 Jan 2019

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (1)

Cheryl Jenkins, Martina Jelocnik, Melinda L. Micallef, Francesca Galea, Alyce Taylor–Brown, Daniel R. Bogema, Michael Liu, Brendon O’Rourke, Catherine Chicken, Joan Carrick & Adam Polkinghorne. (2018) An epizootic of Chlamydia psittaci equine reproductive loss associated with suspected spillover from native Australian parrots. Emerging Microbes & Infections 7:1, pages 1-13.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (37)

Gaia Muroni, Elisa Serra, Giovanni Paolo Biggio, Daniela Sanna, Raffaele Cherchi, Andrea Taras, Simonetta Appino, Cipriano Foxi, Giovanna Masala, Federica Loi & Valentina Chisu. (2024) Detection of Chlamydia psittaci in the Genital Tract of Horses and in Environmental Samples: A Pilot Study in Sardinia. Pathogens 13:3, pages 236.
Crossref
Charles El‐Hage & James Gilkerson. (2023) Chlamydia psittaci : an emerging cause of equine abortion and fatal neonatal illness in south‐eastern Australia . Veterinary Record 193:11.
Crossref
Charles El-Hage, Alistair Legione, Joanne Devlin, Kristopher Hughes, Cheryl Jenkins & James Gilkerson. (2023) Equine Psittacosis and the Emergence of Chlamydia psittaci as an Equine Abortigenic Pathogen in Southeastern Australia: A Retrospective Data Analysis. Animals 13:15, pages 2443.
Crossref
Nicole Borel & Konrad Sachse. 2023. Zoonoses: Infections Affecting Humans and Animals. Zoonoses: Infections Affecting Humans and Animals 793 819 .
Nicole Borel & Konrad Sachse. 2022. Zoonoses: Infections Affecting Humans and Animals. Zoonoses: Infections Affecting Humans and Animals 1 28 .
Kirrilly Thompson, Joanne Taylor, Diana Mendez, Catherine Chicken, Joan Carrick & David N. Durrheim. (2022) Willingness to adopt personal biosecurity strategies on thoroughbred breeding farms: Findings from a multi-site pilot study in Australia's Hunter Valley. Frontiers in Veterinary Science 9.
Crossref
SI Anstey, C Jenkins & M Jelocnik. (2022) Suspected chlamydial foetal loss highlights the need for standardised on‐farm protocols. Australian Veterinary Journal 100:12, pages 600-604.
Crossref
Rhys T. White, Susan I. Anstey, Vasilli Kasimov, Cheryl Jenkins, Joanne Devlin, Charles El-Hage, Yvonne Pannekoek, Alistair R. Legione & Martina Jelocnik. (2022) One clone to rule them all: Culture-independent genomics of Chlamydia psittaci from equine and avian hosts in Australia. Microbial Genomics 8:10.
Crossref
Vasilli Kasimov, Yalun Dong, Renfu Shao, Aaron Brunton, Susan I. Anstey, Clancy Hall, Gareth Chalmers, Gabriel Conroy, Rosemary Booth, Peter Timms & Martina Jelocnik. (2022) Emerging and well‐characterized chlamydial infections detected in a wide range of wild Australian birds. Transboundary and Emerging Diseases 69:5.
Crossref
Hanna Marti & Martina Jelocnik. (2022) Animal Chlamydiae: A Concern for Human and Veterinary Medicine. Pathogens 11:3, pages 364.
Crossref
İsmail KARADAŞ & Oktay KESKİN. (2021) Şanlıurfa’da Safkan Arap Atlarında Chlamydia abortus Seropozitifliğinin BelirlenmesiDetermination of Chlamydia abortus Seropositivity in Arabian Thoroughbred Horses in Şanlıurfa. Erciyes Üniversitesi Veteriner Fakültesi Dergisi 18:3, pages 226-230.
Crossref
Silvia Ciuria, Michael S. M. Brouwer, Marende M. de Gier, Yvonne van Zeeland, Alex Bossers, Barbara Prähauser, Julia Schädler, Jean-Michel Hatt, Marloes Heijne & Nicole Borel. (2021) Chlamydia caviae in Swiss and Dutch Guinea Pigs—Occurrence and Genetic Diversity. Pathogens 10:10, pages 1230.
Crossref
Susan I. Anstey, Vasilli Kasimov, Cheryl Jenkins, Alistair Legione, Joanne Devlin, Jemima Amery-Gale, James Gilkerson, Sam Hair, Nigel Perkins, Alison J. Peel, Nicole Borel, Yvonne Pannekoek, Anne-Lise Chaber, Lucy Woolford, Peter Timms & Martina Jelocnik. (2021) Chlamydia Psittaci ST24: Clonal Strains of One Health Importance Dominate in Australian Horse, Bird and Human Infections. Pathogens 10:8, pages 1015.
Crossref
Helena S. Stokes, Mathew L. Berg & Andrew T. D. Bennett. (2021) A Review of Chlamydial Infections in Wild Birds. Pathogens 10:8, pages 948.
Crossref
S. Anstey, D. Lizárraga, S. Nyari, G. Chalmers, J. Carrick, C. Chicken, C. Jenkins, N. Perkins, P. Timms & M. Jelocnik. (2021) Epidemiology of Chlamydia psittaci infections in pregnant Thoroughbred mares and foals. The Veterinary Journal 273, pages 105683.
Crossref
Alison Favaroni, Alexander Trinks, Michael Weber, Johannes H. Hegemann & Christiane Schnee. (2021) Pmp Repertoires Influence the Different Infectious Potential of Avian and Mammalian Chlamydia psittaci Strains. Frontiers in Microbiology 12.
Crossref
Ting Tang, Haiying Wu, Xi Chen, Li Chen, Luyao Liu, Zhongyu Li, Qinqin Bai, Yuyu Chen & Lili Chen. (2021) The Hypothetical Inclusion Membrane Protein CPSIT_0846 Regulates Mitochondrial-Mediated Host Cell Apoptosis via the ERK/JNK Signaling Pathway. Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology 11.
Crossref
Rumana Akter, Fiona M. Sansom, Charles M. El-Hage, James R. Gilkerson, Alistair R. Legione & Joanne M. Devlin. (2021) A 25-year retrospective study of Chlamydia psittaci in association with equine reproductive loss in Australia. Journal of Medical Microbiology 70:2.
Crossref
A. Tardón, E. Bataller, L. Llobat & E. Jiménez-Trigos. (2021) Bacteria and antibiotic resistance detection in fractures of wild birds from wildlife rehabilitation centres in Spain. Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases 74, pages 101575.
Crossref
R Akter, AW Stent, FM Sansom, JR Gilkerson, C Burden, JM Devlin, AR Legione & CM El‐Hage. (2020) Chlamydia psittaci : a suspected cause of reproductive loss in three Victorian horses . Australian Veterinary Journal 98:11, pages 570-573.
Crossref
Ioannis Magouras, Victoria J. Brookes, Ferran Jori, Angela Martin, Dirk Udo Pfeiffer & Salome Dürr. (2020) Emerging Zoonotic Diseases: Should We Rethink the Animal–Human Interface?. Frontiers in Veterinary Science 7.
Crossref
Sibylle BaumannCorinne GurtnerHanna MartiNicole Borel. (2020) Detection of Chlamydia species in 2 cases of equine abortion in Switzerland: a retrospective study from 2000 to 2018 . Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation 32:4, pages 542-548.
Crossref
S. L. Gough, J. Carrick, S. L. Raidal, S. Keane, N. Collins, L. Cudmore, C. M. Russell, S. Raidal & K. J. Hughes. (2019) Chlamydia psittaci infection as a cause of respiratory disease in neonatal foals . Equine Veterinary Journal 52:2, pages 244-249.
Crossref
Adam Polkinghorne, Kathryn M. Weston & James Branley. (2020) Recent history of psittacosis in Australia: expanding our understanding of the epidemiology of this important globally distributed zoonotic disease. Internal Medicine Journal 50:2, pages 246-249.
Crossref
Jemima Amery-Gale, Alistair R. Legione, Marc S. Marenda, Jane Owens, Paul A. Eden, Barbara M. Konsak-Ilievski, Pam L. Whiteley, Elizabeth C. Dobson, Elizabeth A. Browne, Ron F. Slocombe & Joanne M. Devlin. (2020) SURVEILLANCE FOR CHLAMYDIA SPP. WITH MULTILOCUS SEQUENCE TYPING ANALYSIS IN WILD AND CAPTIVE BIRDS IN VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 56:1, pages 16.
Crossref
Adam Polkinghorne & James Branley. (2020) New insights into chlamydial zoonoses. Microbiology Australia 41:1, pages 14.
Crossref
Belinda Jones, Kathryn Taylor, Robyn M Lucas, Tony Merritt, Catherine Chicken, Jane Heller, Joan Carrick, Rodney Givney & David N Durrheim. (2019) Challenges in using serological methods to explore historical transmission risk of Chlamydia psittaci in a workforce with high exposure to equine chlamydiosis. Communicable Diseases Intelligence 43.
Crossref
Martina Jelocnik. (2019) Chlamydiae from Down Under: The Curious Cases of Chlamydial Infections in Australia. Microorganisms 7:12, pages 602.
Crossref
Michelle Sutherland, Subir Sarker, Paola K. Vaz, Alistair R. Legione, Joanne M. Devlin, Patricia L. Macwhirter, Pamela L. Whiteley & Shane R. Raidal. (2019) Disease surveillance in wild Victorian cacatuids reveals co-infection with multiple agents and detection of novel avian viruses. Veterinary Microbiology 235, pages 257-264.
Crossref
Martina Jelocnik, Adam Polkinghorne & Yvonne Pannekoek. 2019. Chlamydia trachomatis. Chlamydia trachomatis 69 86 .
M. Jelocnik, C. Jenkins, B. O'Rourke, J. Barnwell & A. Polkinghorne. (2018) Molecular evidence to suggest pigeon-type Chlamydia psittaci in association with an equine foal loss . Transboundary and Emerging Diseases 65:3, pages 911-915.
Crossref
Nicole Borel, Adam Polkinghorne & Andreas Pospischil. (2018) A Review on Chlamydial Diseases in Animals: Still a Challenge for Pathologists?. Veterinary Pathology 55:3, pages 374-390.
Crossref
Monika Szymańska-Czerwińska, Agata Mitura, Kinga Zaręba, Christiane Schnee, Andrzej Koncicki & Krzysztof Niemczuk. (2017) Poultry in Poland as Chlamydiaceae carrier . Journal of Veterinary Research 61:4, pages 411-419.
Crossref
A. Polkinghorne & G. Greub. (2017) A new equine and zoonotic threat emerges from an old avian pathogen, Chlamydia psittaci. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 23:10, pages 693-694.
Crossref
Martina Jelocnik, Md. Mominul Islam, Danielle Madden, Cheryl Jenkins, James Branley, Scott Carver & Adam Polkinghorne. (2017) Development and evaluation of rapid novel isothermal amplification assays for important veterinary pathogens: Chlamydia psittaci and Chlamydia pecorum . PeerJ 5, pages e3799.
Crossref
Israel Rubio-Navarrete, Roberto Montes-de-Oca-Jiménez, Jorge Acosta-Dibarrat, Humberto Gustavo Monroy-Salazar, Vladimir Morales-Erasto, Pomposo Fernández-Rosas, Mona M.M.Y. Elghandour & Edwin Nicholas Odongo. (2017) Prevalence of Chlamydia abortus Antibodies in Horses From the Northern State of Mexico and Its Relationship With Domestic Animals. Journal of Equine Veterinary Science 56, pages 110-113.
Crossref
A. Taylor-Brown & A. Polkinghorne. (2017) New and emerging chlamydial infections of creatures great and small. New Microbes and New Infections 18, pages 28-33.
Crossref