@article{mbs:/content/journal/ijsem/10.1099/ijs.0.035246-0, author = "Christensen, Henrik and Bertelsen, Mads F. and Bojesen, Anders Miki and Bisgaard, Magne", title = "Classification of Pasteurella species B as Pasteurella oralis sp. nov.", journal= "International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology", year = "2012", volume = "62", number = "Pt_6", pages = "1396-1401", doi = "https://doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.035246-0", url = "https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/ijsem/10.1099/ijs.0.035246-0", publisher = "Microbiology Society", issn = "1466-5034", type = "Journal Article", abstract = " Pasteurella species B has so far only been reported from the oral cavity of dogs, cats and a ferret. In the present study, information from 15 recent isolates from different sources, including African hedgehogs (Atelerix albiventris), banded mongoose (Mungos mungo), Moholi bushbabies (Galago moholi) and pneumonia of a cat, were compared to five strains investigated previously from bite wounds in humans inflicted by a cat and dog and from gingiva of a cat. rpoB gene sequence comparison showed that 17 isolates, including the reference strain (CCUG 19794T), had identical sequences, whereas two were closely related and demonstrated 97.9 and 99.6 % similarity to strain CCUG 19794T, respectively; the type strain of Pasteurella stomatis was the most closely related strain, with 92.3 % similarity. This is within the mean range (76–100 %) of rpoB gene sequence similarity between species of the same genus within the family Pasteurellaceae . 16S rRNA gene sequencing of four strains selected based on rpoB sequence comparison showed at least 99.7 % similarity between strains of Pasteurella species B, with 96.2 % similarity to the type strain of the closest related species ( Pasteurella canis ), indicating that Pasteurella species B should have separate species status. Separate species status was also documented when recN sequence comparisons were converted to a genome similarity of 93.7 % within Pasteurella species B and 59.0 % to the type strain of the closest related species ( P. canis ). Based on analysis of the phylogenetic and phenotypic data, and since most isolates originate from the oral cavities of a diverse group of animals, it is suggested that these bacteria be classified as Pasteurella oralis sp. nov.; the type strain is P683T ( = CCUG 19794T = CCM 7950T = strain 23193T = MCCM 00102T), obtained from a cat. Previous reports of the type strain have shown ubiquinone-8, demethylmenaquinone-8 and menaquinone-8 as the major quinones. Polyamines in the type strain were reported as diaminopropane, putrescine, cadaverine, sym-norspermidine, spermidine and spermine in a previous investigation, and the major fatty acids of the type strain were reported to be C16 : 0, C16 : 1ω7c and C14 : 0, with minor amounts of C18 : 0 and C18 : 1ω9c. The DNA G+C content of the type strain has been reported to be 40.0 mol%.", }