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1 July 2003 Failure of Viable Nonculturable Campylobacter jejuni to Colonize the Cecum of Newly Hatched Leghorn Chicks
Richard L. Ziprin, Robert E. Droleskey, Michael E. Hume, Roger B. Harvey
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Abstract

Campylobacter jejuni cells entered the viable but nonculturable (VBNC) state upon suspension in sterile water. Cell viability was determined with tetrazolium violet. VBNC cells suspended in water for 7, 10, or 14 days were given, by gavage, to day-of-hatch leghorn chickens. The ceca of control and challenged birds were examined for the presence of campylobacteria by conventional microbiological methods at 1 wk and 2 wk after challenge inoculation and by polymerase chain reaction methods at 1 wk after challenge. We did not find culturable Campylobacter cells in the ceca. Neither was Campylobacter DNA found in cecal samples. Therefore, VBNC cells did not revert to the culturable colonizing form, nor did VBNC cells persist within the cecal environment.

Richard L. Ziprin, Robert E. Droleskey, Michael E. Hume, and Roger B. Harvey "Failure of Viable Nonculturable Campylobacter jejuni to Colonize the Cecum of Newly Hatched Leghorn Chicks," Avian Diseases 47(3), 753-758, (1 July 2003). https://doi.org/10.1637/7015
Received: 13 January 2003; Published: 1 July 2003
KEYWORDS
Campylobacter
viable nonculturable
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