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Vet Pathol 44:144-150 (2007)
© 2007 American College of Veterinary Pathologists

Chlamydiae in Free-Ranging and Captive Frogs in Switzerland

C. Blumer, D. R. Zimmermann, R. Weilenmann, L. Vaughan and A. Pospischil

Institute of Veterinary Pathology, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Zurich, Switzerland (CB, RW, LV, AP), Institute of Clinical Pathology, University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland (DRZ)

A total of 210 frog samples originating either from a mass mortality (1991/1992) or from routine postmortem investigations of the years 1990 to 2004 were examined retrospectively for a possible involvement of Chlamydiae. For a prevalence study of Chlamydia in a selected Swiss amphibian population, 403 samples from free-ranging Rana temporaria were examined. Histopathology, immunohistochemistry using a monoclonal antibody against chlamydial lipopolysaccharide, and a 16S rRNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) followed by DNA sequencing were performed on the formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissues. Using PCR, 8 of 54 (14.8%) frog samples from the mass mortality (1991/1992) were positive for Chlamydia suis S45. A control group of healthy Xenopus laevis had 3 of 38 positive samples, sequenced as C suis S45 (2/3) and an endosymbiont of Acanthamoeba species UWE1 (1/3). Chlamydophila pneumoniae TW-183 was detected from exotic frogs kept in a zoo. Of the frogs collected for the prevalence study, 6 of 238 (2.5%) tested positive, 1 each for C suis S45, Cp pneumoniae TW-183, and uncultured Chlamydiales CRG22, and the remaining 3 revealed Chlamydophila abortus S26/3. In immunohistochemistry, there were 2 positive labeling reactions, 1 in intestine and the other in the epithelium coating the body cavity, both testing positive for Cp pneumoniae TW-183 in PCR. Histologically there were no lesions recorded being characteristic for Chlamydia. Although there is a prevalence of Chlamydia in Swiss frogs, no connection to a mass mortality (1991/1992) could be established. For the first time, C suis S45 and Cp abortus S26/3 were detected in frog material.


Key words: Amphibians; Chlamydia; immunohistochemistry; polymerase chain reaction.

Request reprints from A. Pospischil, Institute of Veterinary Pathology, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 268, CH-8057 Zurich (Switzerland). E-mail: apos{at}vetpath.unizh.ch







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Copyright © 2007 by the American College of Veterinary Pathologists.