Salmonella enterica are again divided into 6 subspecies:
- ssp.arizonae (group IIIa)
- ssp.diarizonae (group IIIb)
- ssp.enterica (group I)
- ssp.houtenae (group IV)
- ssp.indica (group VI)
- ssp.salamae (group II)
Nearly all human pathogenic salmonellae are found in the septa s. enterica ssp enterica. The further subdivision into serovars results from the different antigen patterns. Antigen patterns:
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O ant igen (surface antigen; note: the O originally stood only for "without puff", meaning these bacteria do not swarm on an agar plate): More than 60 different types exist.
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H antigens (flagellar antigens): Their antigenic structure is characterized by 2 different protein groups: H1 antigens and H2 antigens.Both phases can occur singly or together. The H1 antigens are marked with lower case letters. Since these are not sufficient, they are also numbered (e.g. z1, z2 etc.). The H-antigens of phase H2 are identified by lower case letters and numbers.
K-antigens (capsular antigens; also called Vi antigen, an additional surface antigen, which was initially held primarily responsible for virulence; however, it represents a special case of a capsular antigen) occur only rarely, but they characterize the Typhi and Paratyphi varieties.
By this serological differentiation, about 2,500 serovars can currently be differentiated (they were formerly called species) and listed in the Kauffmann-White scheme.
Significance: Infectious diseases caused by Salmonella range from relatively harmless localized enteritis to severe septic and severe cyclic general infections.
For practical medical reasons, in this respect, it is necessary to distinguish the genus Salmonella into:
- Typhoid Salmonella
- non-typhoidal (enteric) Salmonellae
useful. Non-typhoidal Salmonellae usually cause gastroenteritis in humans. These are also called salmonella enteritis or salmonellosis.
Typhoid Salmonella such as S.enterica Serovar Typhi short: S.Typhi and S.enterica Serovar Paratyphi A,B. or C , short: S. Paratyphi A- C on the other hand cause systemic infections with intestinal involvement.
The typhoid salmonellae (typhoid and paratyphoid) include:
- Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhi (S.typhi for short) Causes typhoid fever.
- Salmonella enterica Serovar Paraptyphus A (short S.Paratyphi A)
- Salmonella enterica Serovar Paraptyphus B (S.Paratyphi B for short)
- Salmonella enterica Serovar Paraptyphus C (S.Paratyphi C for short)
- Several other salmonella varieties (S.Enteritides, S.Typhimurium, S.Hadra)