Detection and differentiation of Leishmania parasites in asymptomatic canine by High-Resolution Melting analysis of microsatellite fragment in ITS gene
Autor: | Adel Spotin, Parviz Parvizi, Narmin Najafzadeh, R. Taslimian, R. Fotouhi-Ardakani |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2022 |
Předmět: |
Leishmania
High prevalence Biology Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction biology.organism_classification Microbiology Virology Asymptomatic High Resolution Melt Dogs Infectious Diseases parasitic diseases medicine Animals Microsatellite Parasites Dog Diseases medicine.symptom Leishmaniasis Gene Microsatellite Repeats Mixed infection Blood sampling |
Zdroj: | Microbial Pathogenesis. 162:105300 |
ISSN: | 0882-4010 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.micpath.2021.105300 |
Popis: | The high prevalence of Leishmania infection was reported in dogs as the main reservoir of CanL in many locations in the old world. Detection and firmly identification of Leishmania species in asymptomatic dogs by reliable method was considered and employed. Non-invasive and non-anesthetized blood sampling in asymptomatic dogs was conducted. Nested, conventional and real-time PCR with HRM technique was performed targeting ITS-rDNA gene. 88 asymptomatic dogs were sampled from three CanL endemic provinces of Iran in 2018–2019. 23 blood samples were Leishmania positive. L. major, L. tropica and L. infantum were accurately identified for the first time with HRM targeting ITS2-microsatellite. Three samples were mixed infections. CLC software TM predictions for microsatellite ITS-rDNA were 86.93 °C: L. major, 85.76 °C: L. tropica and 86.04 °C: L. infantum. Standard strains of Leishmania species were accurately separated with almost one to 2 °C deference (L. major: 86.61 °C, L. infantum: 85.41 °C, L. tropica: 84.82 °C). Each HRM curve represents one species in a sample for helping accurate identification of Leishmania species and even mixed infection when two curves are present. Detecting parasites at primary stages in asymptomatic cases is essential using Real-time HRM. As same as mammalian Leishmania in rodents which is present at early stages and non-pathogenesis, only L. major would exist and other Leishmania disappears. This can conclude also for L. major, L. infantum and L. tropica in dogs. The role of L. major existence in canine blood should be investigated more. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |