Title: Research Communications of the 24th ECVIM-CA Congress Document date: 2015_1_10
ID: r59usk02_428
Snippet: No conflicts of interest reported. Campylobacter species are commonly isolated from faeces of dogs and cats with C. upsaliensis (CU) and C. helveticus (CH) being the most frequently isolated. These two species are usually not considered pathogenic in dogs and cats and are closely related to each other and to C. jejuni, the most common cause of bacterial gastroenteritis in humans in the developed world. Interestingly, despite their close genetic r.....
Document: No conflicts of interest reported. Campylobacter species are commonly isolated from faeces of dogs and cats with C. upsaliensis (CU) and C. helveticus (CH) being the most frequently isolated. These two species are usually not considered pathogenic in dogs and cats and are closely related to each other and to C. jejuni, the most common cause of bacterial gastroenteritis in humans in the developed world. Interestingly, despite their close genetic relationship, in humans CU is considered a pathogen while CH is not. This study aimed to describe whole genomes of CU and CH isolated from dogs and cats and to in silico investigate their pathogenic potential with comparison to several published genomes of C. jejuni and C. coli.
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