Chlamydophila psittaci
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''Chlamydia psittaci'' is a lethal intracellular parasite, intracellular bacterial species that may cause Endemism, endemic Bird, avian chlamydiosis, epizootic outbreaks in mammals, and respiratory psittacosis in humans. Potential hosts include feral birds and domesticated poultry, as well as cattle, pigs, sheep, and horses. ''C. psittaci'' is transmitted by inhalation, contact, or ingestion among birds and to mammals. Psittacosis in birds and in humans often starts with Influenza-like illness, flu-like symptoms and becomes a life-threatening pneumonia. Many strains remain virus latency, quiescent in birds until activated by stress. Birds are excellent, highly mobile vector (epidemiology), vectors for the distribution of chlamydia infection, because they feed on, and have access to, the detritus of infected animals of all sorts. ''C. psittaci'' in birds is often systemic disease, systemic, and infections can be inapparent, severe, acute, or chronic with intermittent shedding. ''C. psittaci'' strains in birds infect mucous membrane, mucosal epithelium, epithelial cells and macrophages of the respiratory tract. Sepsis, Septicaemia eventually develops and the bacteria become localized in Epithelium, epithelial cells and macrophages of most Organ (anatomy), organs, conjunctiva, and Human gastrointestinal tract, gastrointestinal tracts. It can also be passed in the eggs. Stress will commonly trigger onset of severe symptoms, resulting in rapid deterioration and death. ''C. psittaci'' strains are similar in virulence, grow readily in cell culture, have 16S ribosomal RNA, 16S rRNA genes that differ by <0.8%, and belong to eight known serotypes. All should be considered to be readily transmissible to humans. ''C. psittaci'' serovar A is endemic among Parrot, psittacine birds and has caused sporadic Zoonosis, zoonotic disease in humans, other mammals, and tortoises. Serovar B is endemic among Columbidae, pigeons, has been isolated from Turkey (bird), turkeys, and has also been identified as the cause of abortion in herds of dairy cattle. Serovars C and D are Occupational safety and health, occupational hazards for slaughterhouse workers and for people in contact with birds. Serovar E isolates (known as Cal-10, MP or MN) have been obtained from a variety of avian hosts worldwide and, although they were associated with the 1920s–1930s outbreak in humans, a specific reservoir for serovar E has not been identified. The M56 and WC serovars were isolated during outbreaks in mammals. Many ''C. psittaci'' strains are susceptible to bacteriophages.


Life cycle and method of infection

''Chlamydia psittaci'' is a small bacterium (0.5μm) that undergoes several transformations during its lifecycle. It exists as an elementary body (EB) between Host (biology), hosts. The EB is not biologically active, but is resistant to Natural environment, environmental stresses and can survive outside a host. The EB travels from an infection, infected bird to the lungs of an uninfected bird or person in small Drop (liquid), droplets, and is responsible for infection. Once in the lungs, the EB is taken up by cell (biology), cells in a pouch called an endosome by phagocytosis. However, the EB is not destroyed by fusion with lysosomes, as is typical for phagocytosed material. Instead, it transforms into a reticulate body and begins to replicate within the endosome. The reticulate bodies must use some of the host's cellular machinery to complete their replication. The reticulate bodies then convert back to elementary bodies, and are released back into the lung, often after causing the death of the host cell. The EBs are thereafter able to infect new cells, either in the same organism or in a new host. Thus, the lifecycle of ''C. psittaci'' is divided between the elementary body which is able to infect new hosts, but can not replicate, and the reticulate body, which replicates, but is not able to cause new infection.


History

The disease caused by ''C. psittaci'', psittacosis, was first characterized in 1879 when seven individuals in Switzerland were found to experience pneumonia after exposure to tropical pet birds. The causative pathogen was not known. The related bacterial species ''Chlamydia trachomatis'' was described in 1907, but was assumed to be a virus, as it could not be grown on artificial media. In the winter of 1929–1930, a psittacosis pandemic spread across the United States and Europe. Its mortality rate was 20% and as high as 80% for pregnant women. The disease's spread was eventually attributed to exposure to Amazon parrots imported from Argentina. Though ''C. psittaci'' was identified in 1930 as the agent responsible for psittacosis, it was not found to be a bacterium until examination by electron microscopy in the 1960s.


Taxonomy

For several decades, the family Chlamydiaceae contained a sole genus, ''Chlamydia''. ''C. psittaci'' was originally classified from the 1960s to 1999 as a species of this sole genus. In 1999, the order Chlamydiales was assigned two new families (Parachlamydiaceae and Simkaniaceae), and within the family Chlamydiaceae, the genus ''Chlamydia'' was divided into two genera, ''Chlamydia'' and the newly designated genus ''Chlamydophila'', with ''C. psittaci'' becoming ''Chlamydophila psittaci''. However, this reclassification "was not wholly accepted or adopted" among microbiologists, which "resulted in a reversion to the single, original genus ''Chlamydia'', which now encompasses all 9 species including ''C. psittaci''." A new species was added to the reunited genus ''Chlamydia'' in 2013, two more were added in 2014. What were once classified as the mammal-endemic strains ''C. psittaci'' abortion, C. psittaci'' Felinae, feline, and ''C. psittaci'' guinea pig are today three separate species, ''Chlamydophila abortus, C. abortus'', ''Chlamydophila felis, C. felis'', and ''Chlamydophila caviae, C. caviae''.


Diseases

''C. psittaci'' infection is also associated with schizophrenia. Many other kinds of infections have been associated with schizophrenia.


Genomics

Like other Chlamydia, ''C. psittaci'' is an Intracellular parasite, intracellular pathogen and has thus undergone significant genome reduction. Most ''C. psittaci'' genomes encode between 1,000 and 1,400 proteins. A total of 911 core genes were found to be present in all 20 strains sequenced by Read et al., corresponding to 90% of the genes present in each genome.


Confirmation of diagnosis

In addition to symptoms and CHX, complement fixation test, complement fixation, Immunofluorescence, microimmunofluorescence, and polymerase chain reaction tests can be used to confirm the diagnosis.


Treatment

Tetracycline or macrolides can be used to treat this condition. The drugs are given intravenously or orally, depending on drug choice. Treatment should continue for 10–14 days after the fever subsides. In children or pregnant women, though, tetracycline should not be used. Ibuprofen or acetominophen, and fluids are also administered. Cigarette or tobacco smoke should be avoided. While taking tetracycline, dairy products should be avoided.


See also

* Chlamydia infection, ''Chlamydia'' infection * Koala, Koala (''Phascolarctos cinereus'')


References


Further reading

* {{Taxonbar, from=Q134275 Chlamydiota Biological anti-agriculture weapons