Rickettsia parkeri (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae) detected in Amblyomma maculatum ticks collected on dogs in Tabasco, Mexico
Autor: | Guadalupe Arjona-Jimenez, Yessenia N Alvarado-Kantun, Maritza Zaragoza-Vera, Claudia V. Zaragoza-Vera, Carlos M. Baak-Baak, Oswaldo M. Torres-Chable, Ligia Guadalupe Brito-Argaez, Bertha Jiménez-Delgadillo, Nohemi Cigarroa-Toledo, Carlos Machain-Williams, Julian E. Garcia-Rejon |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
Tick 01 natural sciences Rickettsiaceae 030308 mycology & parasitology Microbiology law.invention 03 medical and health sciences Dogs Ticks law parasitic diseases Animals Amblyomma maculatum Rickettsia Mexico Polymerase chain reaction 0303 health sciences Ecology biology General Medicine bacterial infections and mycoses biology.organism_classification DNA extraction 010602 entomology Animal ecology Insect Science Rickettsiales |
Zdroj: | Experimental and Applied Acarology. 82:431-440 |
ISSN: | 1572-9702 0168-8162 |
Popis: | The present study was carried out to identify Rickettsia species with zoonotic potential in ticks collected from dogs in a rural area in Tabasco, Mexico. In total 197 Amblyomma maculatum ticks were collected from 40 domestic dogs. The collected specimens were pooled and subjected to DNA extraction. A fragment (380 bp) of citrate synthase gene (gltA) was amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using universal primers for Rickettsia. A second PCR was later performed to amplify a fragment (420 bp) of the outer membrane protein B gene (ompB). The PCR products were purified, sequenced and compared using the basic local alignment search tool (BLAST). Twenty out of 40 (50%) tick pools assayed were positive for rickettsial DNA using both primer pairs. The consensus sequence obtained from the ompB gene fragments showed 99.5-100% of identity with strains of Rickettsia parkeri. This study provides the first molecular evidence of the presence of R. parkeri in A. maculatum ticks infesting domestic dogs from southeastern Mexico. Close contact between dogs and humans should lead to consider the infection caused by this species of Rickettsia among the differential diagnoses for people of Tabasco, Mexico, who show acute febrile syndrome associated to inoculation eschar and have a clinical history of tick exposure. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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